diff --git "a/data/processed/nyt.test04.jsonl" "b/data/processed/nyt.test04.jsonl" new file mode 100644--- /dev/null +++ "b/data/processed/nyt.test04.jsonl" @@ -0,0 +1,1721 @@ +ci 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": "Mohamed refuses to flee ."} +{"question": "What is Balducci's profession?", "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": "gendarme", "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."} +{"question": "How was the cousin's throat cut?", "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": "like a sheep", "sentence": "Balducci explains that the prisoner, who\u2019s never named in the Camus story, has cut the throat of a cousin (\u201c like a sheep \u201d) and now Daru needs to take Mohamed to another town for some French justice and certain death.", "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 (\u201c like 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 (\u201c like 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 (\u201c like a sheep \u201d) and now Daru needs to take Mohamed to another town for some French justice and certain death."} +{"question": "Who is the director of photography?", "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": "Guillaume Deffontaines", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "What country was the movie filmed in?", "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": "Morocco", "sentence": "(The movie was shot in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco .)", "paragraph_sentence": "Before long, the men are tramping through the desert, where step by step, over one and then another crest, they walk and periodically speak, sharing meals and assorted dangers. With the director of photography Guillaume Deffontaines, Mr. Oelhoffen conveys the striking, multicolored glories of this rough landscape, with all its sun-shot gradations of red and brown, without descending into picture-postcard banality. (The movie was shot in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco .) Many of the movie\u2019s most effective scenes involve the men just walking through this extraordinary landscape, the warring splendor and harshness of their surroundings \u2014 equally inviting and foreboding \u2014 as seemingly at odds as the attraction-repulsion that initially defines Daru and Mohamed\u2019s relationship.", "paragraph_answer": "Before long, the men are tramping through the desert, where step by step, over one and then another crest, they walk and periodically speak, sharing meals and assorted dangers. With the director of photography Guillaume Deffontaines, Mr. Oelhoffen conveys the striking, multicolored glories of this rough landscape, with all its sun-shot gradations of red and brown, without descending into picture-postcard banality. (The movie was shot in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco .) Many of the movie\u2019s most effective scenes involve the men just walking through this extraordinary landscape, the warring splendor and harshness of their surroundings \u2014 equally inviting and foreboding \u2014 as seemingly at odds as the attraction-repulsion that initially defines Daru and Mohamed\u2019s relationship.", "sentence_answer": "(The movie was shot in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco .)"} +{"question": "What mountain range is shown in the film?", "paragraph": "Before long, the men are tramping through the desert, where step by step, over one and then another crest, they walk and periodically speak, sharing meals and assorted dangers. With the director of photography Guillaume Deffontaines, Mr. Oelhoffen conveys the striking, multicolored glories of this rough landscape, with all its sun-shot gradations of red and brown, without descending into picture-postcard banality. (The movie was shot in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco.) Many of the movie\u2019s most effective scenes involve the men just walking through this extraordinary landscape, the warring splendor and harshness of their surroundings \u2014 equally inviting and foreboding \u2014 as seemingly at odds as the attraction-repulsion that initially defines Daru and Mohamed\u2019s relationship.", "answer": "the Atlas Mountains", "sentence": "(The movie was shot in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco.)", "paragraph_sentence": "Before long, the men are tramping through the desert, where step by step, over one and then another crest, they walk and periodically speak, sharing meals and assorted dangers. With the director of photography Guillaume Deffontaines, Mr. Oelhoffen conveys the striking, multicolored glories of this rough landscape, with all its sun-shot gradations of red and brown, without descending into picture-postcard banality. (The movie was shot in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco.) Many of the movie\u2019s most effective scenes involve the men just walking through this extraordinary landscape, the warring splendor and harshness of their surroundings \u2014 equally inviting and foreboding \u2014 as seemingly at odds as the attraction-repulsion that initially defines Daru and Mohamed\u2019s relationship.", "paragraph_answer": "Before long, the men are tramping through the desert, where step by step, over one and then another crest, they walk and periodically speak, sharing meals and assorted dangers. With the director of photography Guillaume Deffontaines, Mr. Oelhoffen conveys the striking, multicolored glories of this rough landscape, with all its sun-shot gradations of red and brown, without descending into picture-postcard banality. (The movie was shot in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco.) Many of the movie\u2019s most effective scenes involve the men just walking through this extraordinary landscape, the warring splendor and harshness of their surroundings \u2014 equally inviting and foreboding \u2014 as seemingly at odds as the attraction-repulsion that initially defines Daru and Mohamed\u2019s relationship.", "sentence_answer": "(The movie was shot in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco.)"} +{"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."} +{"question": "What is the name of the director that conveys this rough landscape in the movie?", "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": "Mr. Oelhoffen", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "Who plays Slimane?", "paragraph": "Although astringent by mainstream movie standards, \u201cFar From Men\u201d is shored up with increasingly personalized conversations between Daru and Mohamed that explain the men, their lives and times. At one point, they come across a small detachment of Algerian guerrillas that includes Slimane (Djemel Barek), a former army compatriot of Daru\u2019s, and which for a short, eventful interlude swallows the travelers up. Mr. Oelhoffen sometimes explains too much, but his work with the actors is precise and delicate. Both Mr. Kateb and Mr. Mortensen, who deliver their dialogue in Arabic and French (Mr. Mortensen also speaks a little Spanish), are generous performers and they share the screen easily. They\u2019re playing nomads from separate histories and cultures who, in their radical isolation, turn out to be right at home.", "answer": "Djemel Barek", "sentence": "At one point, they come across a small detachment of Algerian guerrillas that includes Slimane ( Djemel Barek ), a former army compatriot of Daru\u2019s, and which for a short, eventful interlude swallows the travelers up.", "paragraph_sentence": "Although astringent by mainstream movie standards, \u201cFar From Men\u201d is shored up with increasingly personalized conversations between Daru and Mohamed that explain the men, their lives and times. At one point, they come across a small detachment of Algerian guerrillas that includes Slimane ( Djemel Barek ), a former army compatriot of Daru\u2019s, and which for a short, eventful interlude swallows the travelers up. Mr. Oelhoffen sometimes explains too much, but his work with the actors is precise and delicate. Both Mr. Kateb and Mr. Mortensen, who deliver their dialogue in Arabic and French (Mr. Mortensen also speaks a little Spanish), are generous performers and they share the screen easily. They\u2019re playing nomads from separate histories and cultures who, in their radical isolation, turn out to be right at home.", "paragraph_answer": "Although astringent by mainstream movie standards, \u201cFar From Men\u201d is shored up with increasingly personalized conversations between Daru and Mohamed that explain the men, their lives and times. At one point, they come across a small detachment of Algerian guerrillas that includes Slimane ( Djemel Barek ), a former army compatriot of Daru\u2019s, and which for a short, eventful interlude swallows the travelers up. Mr. Oelhoffen sometimes explains too much, but his work with the actors is precise and delicate. Both Mr. Kateb and Mr. Mortensen, who deliver their dialogue in Arabic and French (Mr. Mortensen also speaks a little Spanish), are generous performers and they share the screen easily. They\u2019re playing nomads from separate histories and cultures who, in their radical isolation, turn out to be right at home.", "sentence_answer": "At one point, they come across a small detachment of Algerian guerrillas that includes Slimane ( Djemel Barek ), a former army compatriot of Daru\u2019s, and which for a short, eventful interlude swallows the travelers up."} +{"question": "What is the nationality of the guerrillas that Daru and Mohamed came across?", "paragraph": "Although astringent by mainstream movie standards, \u201cFar From Men\u201d is shored up with increasingly personalized conversations between Daru and Mohamed that explain the men, their lives and times. At one point, they come across a small detachment of Algerian guerrillas that includes Slimane (Djemel Barek), a former army compatriot of Daru\u2019s, and which for a short, eventful interlude swallows the travelers up. Mr. Oelhoffen sometimes explains too much, but his work with the actors is precise and delicate. Both Mr. Kateb and Mr. Mortensen, who deliver their dialogue in Arabic and French (Mr. Mortensen also speaks a little Spanish), are generous performers and they share the screen easily. They\u2019re playing nomads from separate histories and cultures who, in their radical isolation, turn out to be right at home.", "answer": "Algerian", "sentence": "At one point, they come across a small detachment of Algerian guerrillas that includes Slimane (Djemel Barek), a former army compatriot of Daru\u2019s, and which for a short, eventful interlude swallows the travelers up.", "paragraph_sentence": "Although astringent by mainstream movie standards, \u201cFar From Men\u201d is shored up with increasingly personalized conversations between Daru and Mohamed that explain the men, their lives and times. At one point, they come across a small detachment of Algerian guerrillas that includes Slimane (Djemel Barek), a former army compatriot of Daru\u2019s, and which for a short, eventful interlude swallows the travelers up. Mr. Oelhoffen sometimes explains too much, but his work with the actors is precise and delicate. Both Mr. Kateb and Mr. Mortensen, who deliver their dialogue in Arabic and French (Mr. Mortensen also speaks a little Spanish), are generous performers and they share the screen easily. They\u2019re playing nomads from separate histories and cultures who, in their radical isolation, turn out to be right at home.", "paragraph_answer": "Although astringent by mainstream movie standards, \u201cFar From Men\u201d is shored up with increasingly personalized conversations between Daru and Mohamed that explain the men, their lives and times. At one point, they come across a small detachment of Algerian guerrillas that includes Slimane (Djemel Barek), a former army compatriot of Daru\u2019s, and which for a short, eventful interlude swallows the travelers up. Mr. Oelhoffen sometimes explains too much, but his work with the actors is precise and delicate. Both Mr. Kateb and Mr. Mortensen, who deliver their dialogue in Arabic and French (Mr. Mortensen also speaks a little Spanish), are generous performers and they share the screen easily. They\u2019re playing nomads from separate histories and cultures who, in their radical isolation, turn out to be right at home.", "sentence_answer": "At one point, they come across a small detachment of Algerian guerrillas that includes Slimane (Djemel Barek), a former army compatriot of Daru\u2019s, and which for a short, eventful interlude swallows the travelers up."} +{"question": "What is the name of the movie?", "paragraph": "Although astringent by mainstream movie standards, \u201cFar From Men\u201d is shored up with increasingly personalized conversations between Daru and Mohamed that explain the men, their lives and times. At one point, they come across a small detachment of Algerian guerrillas that includes Slimane (Djemel Barek), a former army compatriot of Daru\u2019s, and which for a short, eventful interlude swallows the travelers up. Mr. Oelhoffen sometimes explains too much, but his work with the actors is precise and delicate. Both Mr. Kateb and Mr. Mortensen, who deliver their dialogue in Arabic and French (Mr. Mortensen also speaks a little Spanish), are generous performers and they share the screen easily. They\u2019re playing nomads from separate histories and cultures who, in their radical isolation, turn out to be right at home.", "answer": "Far From Men", "sentence": "Although astringent by mainstream movie standards, \u201c Far From Men \u201d is shored up with increasingly personalized conversations between Daru and Mohamed that explain the men, their lives and times.", "paragraph_sentence": " Although astringent by mainstream movie standards, \u201c Far From Men \u201d is shored up with increasingly personalized conversations between Daru and Mohamed that explain the men, their lives and times. At one point, they come across a small detachment of Algerian guerrillas that includes Slimane (Djemel Barek), a former army compatriot of Daru\u2019s, and which for a short, eventful interlude swallows the travelers up. Mr. Oelhoffen sometimes explains too much, but his work with the actors is precise and delicate. Both Mr. Kateb and Mr. Mortensen, who deliver their dialogue in Arabic and French (Mr. Mortensen also speaks a little Spanish), are generous performers and they share the screen easily. They\u2019re playing nomads from separate histories and cultures who, in their radical isolation, turn out to be right at home.", "paragraph_answer": "Although astringent by mainstream movie standards, \u201c Far From Men \u201d is shored up with increasingly personalized conversations between Daru and Mohamed that explain the men, their lives and times. At one point, they come across a small detachment of Algerian guerrillas that includes Slimane (Djemel Barek), a former army compatriot of Daru\u2019s, and which for a short, eventful interlude swallows the travelers up. Mr. Oelhoffen sometimes explains too much, but his work with the actors is precise and delicate. Both Mr. Kateb and Mr. Mortensen, who deliver their dialogue in Arabic and French (Mr. Mortensen also speaks a little Spanish), are generous performers and they share the screen easily. They\u2019re playing nomads from separate histories and cultures who, in their radical isolation, turn out to be right at home.", "sentence_answer": "Although astringent by mainstream movie standards, \u201c Far From Men \u201d is shored up with increasingly personalized conversations between Daru and Mohamed that explain the men, their lives and times."} +{"question": "Who was Slimane's former army compatriot?", "paragraph": "Although astringent by mainstream movie standards, \u201cFar From Men\u201d is shored up with increasingly personalized conversations between Daru and Mohamed that explain the men, their lives and times. At one point, they come across a small detachment of Algerian guerrillas that includes Slimane (Djemel Barek), a former army compatriot of Daru\u2019s, and which for a short, eventful interlude swallows the travelers up. Mr. Oelhoffen sometimes explains too much, but his work with the actors is precise and delicate. Both Mr. Kateb and Mr. Mortensen, who deliver their dialogue in Arabic and French (Mr. Mortensen also speaks a little Spanish), are generous performers and they share the screen easily. They\u2019re playing nomads from separate histories and cultures who, in their radical isolation, turn out to be right at home.", "answer": "Daru", "sentence": "Although astringent by mainstream movie standards, \u201cFar From Men\u201d is shored up with increasingly personalized conversations between Daru and Mohamed that explain the men, their lives and times.", "paragraph_sentence": " Although astringent by mainstream movie standards, \u201cFar From Men\u201d is shored up with increasingly personalized conversations between Daru and Mohamed that explain the men, their lives and times. At one point, they come across a small detachment of Algerian guerrillas that includes Slimane (Djemel Barek), a former army compatriot of Daru\u2019s, and which for a short, eventful interlude swallows the travelers up. Mr. Oelhoffen sometimes explains too much, but his work with the actors is precise and delicate. Both Mr. Kateb and Mr. Mortensen, who deliver their dialogue in Arabic and French (Mr. Mortensen also speaks a little Spanish), are generous performers and they share the screen easily. They\u2019re playing nomads from separate histories and cultures who, in their radical isolation, turn out to be right at home.", "paragraph_answer": "Although astringent by mainstream movie standards, \u201cFar From Men\u201d is shored up with increasingly personalized conversations between Daru and Mohamed that explain the men, their lives and times. At one point, they come across a small detachment of Algerian guerrillas that includes Slimane (Djemel Barek), a former army compatriot of Daru\u2019s, and which for a short, eventful interlude swallows the travelers up. Mr. Oelhoffen sometimes explains too much, but his work with the actors is precise and delicate. Both Mr. Kateb and Mr. Mortensen, who deliver their dialogue in Arabic and French (Mr. Mortensen also speaks a little Spanish), are generous performers and they share the screen easily. They\u2019re playing nomads from separate histories and cultures who, in their radical isolation, turn out to be right at home.", "sentence_answer": "Although astringent by mainstream movie standards, \u201cFar From Men\u201d is shored up with increasingly personalized conversations between Daru and Mohamed that explain the men, their lives and times."} +{"question": "What language does Mr. Mortensen also speak other than Arabic and French?", "paragraph": "Although astringent by mainstream movie standards, \u201cFar From Men\u201d is shored up with increasingly personalized conversations between Daru and Mohamed that explain the men, their lives and times. At one point, they come across a small detachment of Algerian guerrillas that includes Slimane (Djemel Barek), a former army compatriot of Daru\u2019s, and which for a short, eventful interlude swallows the travelers up. Mr. Oelhoffen sometimes explains too much, but his work with the actors is precise and delicate. Both Mr. Kateb and Mr. Mortensen, who deliver their dialogue in Arabic and French (Mr. Mortensen also speaks a little Spanish), are generous performers and they share the screen easily. They\u2019re playing nomads from separate histories and cultures who, in their radical isolation, turn out to be right at home.", "answer": "Spanish", "sentence": "Both Mr. Kateb and Mr. Mortensen, who deliver their dialogue in Arabic and French (Mr. Mortensen also speaks a little Spanish ), are generous performers and they share the screen easily.", "paragraph_sentence": "Although astringent by mainstream movie standards, \u201cFar From Men\u201d is shored up with increasingly personalized conversations between Daru and Mohamed that explain the men, their lives and times. At one point, they come across a small detachment of Algerian guerrillas that includes Slimane (Djemel Barek), a former army compatriot of Daru\u2019s, and which for a short, eventful interlude swallows the travelers up. Mr. Oelhoffen sometimes explains too much, but his work with the actors is precise and delicate. Both Mr. Kateb and Mr. Mortensen, who deliver their dialogue in Arabic and French (Mr. Mortensen also speaks a little Spanish ), are generous performers and they share the screen easily. They\u2019re playing nomads from separate histories and cultures who, in their radical isolation, turn out to be right at home.", "paragraph_answer": "Although astringent by mainstream movie standards, \u201cFar From Men\u201d is shored up with increasingly personalized conversations between Daru and Mohamed that explain the men, their lives and times. At one point, they come across a small detachment of Algerian guerrillas that includes Slimane (Djemel Barek), a former army compatriot of Daru\u2019s, and which for a short, eventful interlude swallows the travelers up. Mr. Oelhoffen sometimes explains too much, but his work with the actors is precise and delicate. Both Mr. Kateb and Mr. Mortensen, who deliver their dialogue in Arabic and French (Mr. Mortensen also speaks a little Spanish ), are generous performers and they share the screen easily. They\u2019re playing nomads from separate histories and cultures who, in their radical isolation, turn out to be right at home.", "sentence_answer": "Both Mr. Kateb and Mr. Mortensen, who deliver their dialogue in Arabic and French (Mr. Mortensen also speaks a little Spanish ), are generous performers and they share the screen easily."} +{"question": "What kind of roads did Formula One used to race on?", "paragraph": "Q. What other differences do you see between then and now in Formula One? A. Before, I loved it that it happened on public roads. In Belgium, after the race, after the deaths, we drove around and to look for where it had happened, driving down to Malmedy and thinking about the war. I don\u2019t know how you can make people understand the difference between a public road and a manufactured piste, manufactured corners, and escape roads in every direction and nothing to hit. Q. But Monza was always a track in a park. That hasn\u2019t changed much. A. Yes, that never impressed me, I never liked it. I loved Belgium, I loved Germany, the setting, the fact that they were public roads. Reims was a road race, and you could imagine the Germans coming over in tanks but it was race cars going in the other direction. It wasn\u2019t much of a circuit, it was only a triangle, very, very fast and there was a wrinkle here and there. It was part of the Champagne country and they gave Champagne for the fastest lap and things like that. It really was a French Grand Prix as opposed to another Grand Prix. Today nothing changes except the crowd.", "answer": "public roads", "sentence": "A. Before, I loved it that it happened on public roads .", "paragraph_sentence": "Q. What other differences do you see between then and now in Formula One? A. Before, I loved it that it happened on public roads . In Belgium, after the race, after the deaths, we drove around and to look for where it had happened, driving down to Malmedy and thinking about the war. I don\u2019t know how you can make people understand the difference between a public road and a manufactured piste, manufactured corners, and escape roads in every direction and nothing to hit. Q. But Monza was always a track in a park. That hasn\u2019t changed much. A. Yes, that never impressed me, I never liked it. I loved Belgium, I loved Germany, the setting, the fact that they were public roads. Reims was a road race, and you could imagine the Germans coming over in tanks but it was race cars going in the other direction. It wasn\u2019t much of a circuit, it was only a triangle, very, very fast and there was a wrinkle here and there. It was part of the Champagne country and they gave Champagne for the fastest lap and things like that. It really was a French Grand Prix as opposed to another Grand Prix. Today nothing changes except the crowd.", "paragraph_answer": "Q. What other differences do you see between then and now in Formula One? A. Before, I loved it that it happened on public roads . In Belgium, after the race, after the deaths, we drove around and to look for where it had happened, driving down to Malmedy and thinking about the war. I don\u2019t know how you can make people understand the difference between a public road and a manufactured piste, manufactured corners, and escape roads in every direction and nothing to hit. Q. But Monza was always a track in a park. That hasn\u2019t changed much. A. Yes, that never impressed me, I never liked it. I loved Belgium, I loved Germany, the setting, the fact that they were public roads. Reims was a road race, and you could imagine the Germans coming over in tanks but it was race cars going in the other direction. It wasn\u2019t much of a circuit, it was only a triangle, very, very fast and there was a wrinkle here and there. It was part of the Champagne country and they gave Champagne for the fastest lap and things like that. It really was a French Grand Prix as opposed to another Grand Prix. Today nothing changes except the crowd.", "sentence_answer": "A. Before, I loved it that it happened on public roads ."} +{"question": "What race track was considered to be in a park?", "paragraph": "Q. What other differences do you see between then and now in Formula One? A. Before, I loved it that it happened on public roads. In Belgium, after the race, after the deaths, we drove around and to look for where it had happened, driving down to Malmedy and thinking about the war. I don\u2019t know how you can make people understand the difference between a public road and a manufactured piste, manufactured corners, and escape roads in every direction and nothing to hit. Q. But Monza was always a track in a park. That hasn\u2019t changed much. A. Yes, that never impressed me, I never liked it. I loved Belgium, I loved Germany, the setting, the fact that they were public roads. Reims was a road race, and you could imagine the Germans coming over in tanks but it was race cars going in the other direction. It wasn\u2019t much of a circuit, it was only a triangle, very, very fast and there was a wrinkle here and there. It was part of the Champagne country and they gave Champagne for the fastest lap and things like that. It really was a French Grand Prix as opposed to another Grand Prix. Today nothing changes except the crowd.", "answer": "Monza", "sentence": "But Monza was always a track in a park.", "paragraph_sentence": "Q. What other differences do you see between then and now in Formula One? A. Before, I loved it that it happened on public roads. In Belgium, after the race, after the deaths, we drove around and to look for where it had happened, driving down to Malmedy and thinking about the war. I don\u2019t know how you can make people understand the difference between a public road and a manufactured piste, manufactured corners, and escape roads in every direction and nothing to hit. Q. But Monza was always a track in a park. That hasn\u2019t changed much. A. Yes, that never impressed me, I never liked it. I loved Belgium, I loved Germany, the setting, the fact that they were public roads. Reims was a road race, and you could imagine the Germans coming over in tanks but it was race cars going in the other direction. It wasn\u2019t much of a circuit, it was only a triangle, very, very fast and there was a wrinkle here and there. It was part of the Champagne country and they gave Champagne for the fastest lap and things like that. It really was a French Grand Prix as opposed to another Grand Prix. Today nothing changes except the crowd.", "paragraph_answer": "Q. What other differences do you see between then and now in Formula One? A. Before, I loved it that it happened on public roads. In Belgium, after the race, after the deaths, we drove around and to look for where it had happened, driving down to Malmedy and thinking about the war. I don\u2019t know how you can make people understand the difference between a public road and a manufactured piste, manufactured corners, and escape roads in every direction and nothing to hit. Q. But Monza was always a track in a park. That hasn\u2019t changed much. A. Yes, that never impressed me, I never liked it. I loved Belgium, I loved Germany, the setting, the fact that they were public roads. Reims was a road race, and you could imagine the Germans coming over in tanks but it was race cars going in the other direction. It wasn\u2019t much of a circuit, it was only a triangle, very, very fast and there was a wrinkle here and there. It was part of the Champagne country and they gave Champagne for the fastest lap and things like that. It really was a French Grand Prix as opposed to another Grand Prix. Today nothing changes except the crowd.", "sentence_answer": "But Monza was always a track in a park."} +{"question": "What kind of race was Reims?", "paragraph": "Q. What other differences do you see between then and now in Formula One? A. Before, I loved it that it happened on public roads. In Belgium, after the race, after the deaths, we drove around and to look for where it had happened, driving down to Malmedy and thinking about the war. I don\u2019t know how you can make people understand the difference between a public road and a manufactured piste, manufactured corners, and escape roads in every direction and nothing to hit. Q. But Monza was always a track in a park. That hasn\u2019t changed much. A. Yes, that never impressed me, I never liked it. I loved Belgium, I loved Germany, the setting, the fact that they were public roads. Reims was a road race, and you could imagine the Germans coming over in tanks but it was race cars going in the other direction. It wasn\u2019t much of a circuit, it was only a triangle, very, very fast and there was a wrinkle here and there. It was part of the Champagne country and they gave Champagne for the fastest lap and things like that. It really was a French Grand Prix as opposed to another Grand Prix. Today nothing changes except the crowd.", "answer": "road race", "sentence": "Reims was a road race , and you could imagine the Germans coming over in tanks but it was race cars going in the other direction.", "paragraph_sentence": "Q. What other differences do you see between then and now in Formula One? A. Before, I loved it that it happened on public roads. In Belgium, after the race, after the deaths, we drove around and to look for where it had happened, driving down to Malmedy and thinking about the war. I don\u2019t know how you can make people understand the difference between a public road and a manufactured piste, manufactured corners, and escape roads in every direction and nothing to hit. Q. But Monza was always a track in a park. That hasn\u2019t changed much. A. Yes, that never impressed me, I never liked it. I loved Belgium, I loved Germany, the setting, the fact that they were public roads. Reims was a road race , and you could imagine the Germans coming over in tanks but it was race cars going in the other direction. It wasn\u2019t much of a circuit, it was only a triangle, very, very fast and there was a wrinkle here and there. It was part of the Champagne country and they gave Champagne for the fastest lap and things like that. It really was a French Grand Prix as opposed to another Grand Prix. Today nothing changes except the crowd.", "paragraph_answer": "Q. What other differences do you see between then and now in Formula One? A. Before, I loved it that it happened on public roads. In Belgium, after the race, after the deaths, we drove around and to look for where it had happened, driving down to Malmedy and thinking about the war. I don\u2019t know how you can make people understand the difference between a public road and a manufactured piste, manufactured corners, and escape roads in every direction and nothing to hit. Q. But Monza was always a track in a park. That hasn\u2019t changed much. A. Yes, that never impressed me, I never liked it. I loved Belgium, I loved Germany, the setting, the fact that they were public roads. Reims was a road race , and you could imagine the Germans coming over in tanks but it was race cars going in the other direction. It wasn\u2019t much of a circuit, it was only a triangle, very, very fast and there was a wrinkle here and there. It was part of the Champagne country and they gave Champagne for the fastest lap and things like that. It really was a French Grand Prix as opposed to another Grand Prix. Today nothing changes except the crowd.", "sentence_answer": "Reims was a road race , and you could imagine the Germans coming over in tanks but it was race cars going in the other direction."} +{"question": "In what kind of shape was the race track at Reims?", "paragraph": "Q. What other differences do you see between then and now in Formula One? A. Before, I loved it that it happened on public roads. In Belgium, after the race, after the deaths, we drove around and to look for where it had happened, driving down to Malmedy and thinking about the war. I don\u2019t know how you can make people understand the difference between a public road and a manufactured piste, manufactured corners, and escape roads in every direction and nothing to hit. Q. But Monza was always a track in a park. That hasn\u2019t changed much. A. Yes, that never impressed me, I never liked it. I loved Belgium, I loved Germany, the setting, the fact that they were public roads. Reims was a road race, and you could imagine the Germans coming over in tanks but it was race cars going in the other direction. It wasn\u2019t much of a circuit, it was only a triangle, very, very fast and there was a wrinkle here and there. It was part of the Champagne country and they gave Champagne for the fastest lap and things like that. It really was a French Grand Prix as opposed to another Grand Prix. Today nothing changes except the crowd.", "answer": "triangle", "sentence": "It wasn\u2019t much of a circuit, it was only a triangle , very, very fast and there was a wrinkle here and there.", "paragraph_sentence": "Q. What other differences do you see between then and now in Formula One? A. Before, I loved it that it happened on public roads. In Belgium, after the race, after the deaths, we drove around and to look for where it had happened, driving down to Malmedy and thinking about the war. I don\u2019t know how you can make people understand the difference between a public road and a manufactured piste, manufactured corners, and escape roads in every direction and nothing to hit. Q. But Monza was always a track in a park. That hasn\u2019t changed much. A. Yes, that never impressed me, I never liked it. I loved Belgium, I loved Germany, the setting, the fact that they were public roads. Reims was a road race, and you could imagine the Germans coming over in tanks but it was race cars going in the other direction. It wasn\u2019t much of a circuit, it was only a triangle , very, very fast and there was a wrinkle here and there. It was part of the Champagne country and they gave Champagne for the fastest lap and things like that. It really was a French Grand Prix as opposed to another Grand Prix. Today nothing changes except the crowd.", "paragraph_answer": "Q. What other differences do you see between then and now in Formula One? A. Before, I loved it that it happened on public roads. In Belgium, after the race, after the deaths, we drove around and to look for where it had happened, driving down to Malmedy and thinking about the war. I don\u2019t know how you can make people understand the difference between a public road and a manufactured piste, manufactured corners, and escape roads in every direction and nothing to hit. Q. But Monza was always a track in a park. That hasn\u2019t changed much. A. Yes, that never impressed me, I never liked it. I loved Belgium, I loved Germany, the setting, the fact that they were public roads. Reims was a road race, and you could imagine the Germans coming over in tanks but it was race cars going in the other direction. It wasn\u2019t much of a circuit, it was only a triangle , very, very fast and there was a wrinkle here and there. It was part of the Champagne country and they gave Champagne for the fastest lap and things like that. It really was a French Grand Prix as opposed to another Grand Prix. Today nothing changes except the crowd.", "sentence_answer": "It wasn\u2019t much of a circuit, it was only a triangle , very, very fast and there was a wrinkle here and there."} +{"question": "What was the prize given for the fastest lap?", "paragraph": "Q. What other differences do you see between then and now in Formula One? A. Before, I loved it that it happened on public roads. In Belgium, after the race, after the deaths, we drove around and to look for where it had happened, driving down to Malmedy and thinking about the war. I don\u2019t know how you can make people understand the difference between a public road and a manufactured piste, manufactured corners, and escape roads in every direction and nothing to hit. Q. But Monza was always a track in a park. That hasn\u2019t changed much. A. Yes, that never impressed me, I never liked it. I loved Belgium, I loved Germany, the setting, the fact that they were public roads. Reims was a road race, and you could imagine the Germans coming over in tanks but it was race cars going in the other direction. It wasn\u2019t much of a circuit, it was only a triangle, very, very fast and there was a wrinkle here and there. It was part of the Champagne country and they gave Champagne for the fastest lap and things like that. It really was a French Grand Prix as opposed to another Grand Prix. Today nothing changes except the crowd.", "answer": "Champagne", "sentence": "It was part of the Champagne country", "paragraph_sentence": "Q. What other differences do you see between then and now in Formula One? A. Before, I loved it that it happened on public roads. In Belgium, after the race, after the deaths, we drove around and to look for where it had happened, driving down to Malmedy and thinking about the war. I don\u2019t know how you can make people understand the difference between a public road and a manufactured piste, manufactured corners, and escape roads in every direction and nothing to hit. Q. But Monza was always a track in a park. That hasn\u2019t changed much. A. Yes, that never impressed me, I never liked it. I loved Belgium, I loved Germany, the setting, the fact that they were public roads. Reims was a road race, and you could imagine the Germans coming over in tanks but it was race cars going in the other direction. It wasn\u2019t much of a circuit, it was only a triangle, very, very fast and there was a wrinkle here and there. It was part of the Champagne country and they gave Champagne for the fastest lap and things like that. It really was a French Grand Prix as opposed to another Grand Prix. Today nothing changes except the crowd.", "paragraph_answer": "Q. What other differences do you see between then and now in Formula One? A. Before, I loved it that it happened on public roads. In Belgium, after the race, after the deaths, we drove around and to look for where it had happened, driving down to Malmedy and thinking about the war. I don\u2019t know how you can make people understand the difference between a public road and a manufactured piste, manufactured corners, and escape roads in every direction and nothing to hit. Q. But Monza was always a track in a park. That hasn\u2019t changed much. A. Yes, that never impressed me, I never liked it. I loved Belgium, I loved Germany, the setting, the fact that they were public roads. Reims was a road race, and you could imagine the Germans coming over in tanks but it was race cars going in the other direction. It wasn\u2019t much of a circuit, it was only a triangle, very, very fast and there was a wrinkle here and there. It was part of the Champagne country and they gave Champagne for the fastest lap and things like that. It really was a French Grand Prix as opposed to another Grand Prix. Today nothing changes except the crowd.", "sentence_answer": "It was part of the Champagne country"} +{"question": "What implements were implicated in disease outbreaks at various hospitals?", "paragraph": "Duodenoscopes have been implicated in similar outbreaks at other hospitals. In 2013, 39 patients at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, Ill., were infected with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), also the cause of the infections in Los Angeles. In January, officials at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle acknowledged that 32 patients had been infected with CRE by duodenoscopes from November 2012 to early 2014. Eleven patients died, but it is not clear that the infections were the cause, as they had other serious medical problems.", "answer": "Duodenoscopes", "sentence": "Duodenoscopes have been implicated in similar outbreaks at other hospitals.", "paragraph_sentence": " Duodenoscopes have been implicated in similar outbreaks at other hospitals. In 2013, 39 patients at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, Ill., were infected with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), also the cause of the infections in Los Angeles. In January, officials at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle acknowledged that 32 patients had been infected with CRE by duodenoscopes from November 2012 to early 2014. Eleven patients died, but it is not clear that the infections were the cause, as they had other serious medical problems.", "paragraph_answer": " Duodenoscopes have been implicated in similar outbreaks at other hospitals. In 2013, 39 patients at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, Ill., were infected with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), also the cause of the infections in Los Angeles. In January, officials at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle acknowledged that 32 patients had been infected with CRE by duodenoscopes from November 2012 to early 2014. Eleven patients died, but it is not clear that the infections were the cause, as they had other serious medical problems.", "sentence_answer": " Duodenoscopes have been implicated in similar outbreaks at other hospitals."} +{"question": "How many patients were infected with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital?", "paragraph": "Duodenoscopes have been implicated in similar outbreaks at other hospitals. In 2013, 39 patients at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, Ill., were infected with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), also the cause of the infections in Los Angeles. In January, officials at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle acknowledged that 32 patients had been infected with CRE by duodenoscopes from November 2012 to early 2014. Eleven patients died, but it is not clear that the infections were the cause, as they had other serious medical problems.", "answer": "Advocate Lutheran General Hospital", "sentence": "In 2013, 39 patients at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, Ill., were infected with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), also the cause of the infections in Los Angeles.", "paragraph_sentence": "Duodenoscopes have been implicated in similar outbreaks at other hospitals. In 2013, 39 patients at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, Ill., were infected with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), also the cause of the infections in Los Angeles. In January, officials at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle acknowledged that 32 patients had been infected with CRE by duodenoscopes from November 2012 to early 2014. Eleven patients died, but it is not clear that the infections were the cause, as they had other serious medical problems.", "paragraph_answer": "Duodenoscopes have been implicated in similar outbreaks at other hospitals. In 2013, 39 patients at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, Ill., were infected with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), also the cause of the infections in Los Angeles. In January, officials at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle acknowledged that 32 patients had been infected with CRE by duodenoscopes from November 2012 to early 2014. Eleven patients died, but it is not clear that the infections were the cause, as they had other serious medical problems.", "sentence_answer": "In 2013, 39 patients at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, Ill., were infected with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), also the cause of the infections in Los Angeles."} +{"question": "What year did the outbreak at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital occur?", "paragraph": "Duodenoscopes have been implicated in similar outbreaks at other hospitals. In 2013, 39 patients at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, Ill., were infected with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), also the cause of the infections in Los Angeles. In January, officials at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle acknowledged that 32 patients had been infected with CRE by duodenoscopes from November 2012 to early 2014. Eleven patients died, but it is not clear that the infections were the cause, as they had other serious medical problems.", "answer": "Virginia Mason Hospital", "sentence": "In January, officials at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle acknowledged that 32 patients had been infected with CRE by duodenoscopes from November 2012 to early 2014.", "paragraph_sentence": "Duodenoscopes have been implicated in similar outbreaks at other hospitals. In 2013, 39 patients at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, Ill., were infected with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), also the cause of the infections in Los Angeles. In January, officials at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle acknowledged that 32 patients had been infected with CRE by duodenoscopes from November 2012 to early 2014. Eleven patients died, but it is not clear that the infections were the cause, as they had other serious medical problems.", "paragraph_answer": "Duodenoscopes have been implicated in similar outbreaks at other hospitals. In 2013, 39 patients at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, Ill., were infected with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), also the cause of the infections in Los Angeles. In January, officials at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle acknowledged that 32 patients had been infected with CRE by duodenoscopes from November 2012 to early 2014. Eleven patients died, but it is not clear that the infections were the cause, as they had other serious medical problems.", "sentence_answer": "In January, officials at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle acknowledged that 32 patients had been infected with CRE by duodenoscopes from November 2012 to early 2014."} +{"question": "Where is Virginia Mason Hospital located?", "paragraph": "Duodenoscopes have been implicated in similar outbreaks at other hospitals. In 2013, 39 patients at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, Ill., were infected with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), also the cause of the infections in Los Angeles. In January, officials at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle acknowledged that 32 patients had been infected with CRE by duodenoscopes from November 2012 to early 2014. Eleven patients died, but it is not clear that the infections were the cause, as they had other serious medical problems.", "answer": "Seattle", "sentence": "In January, officials at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle acknowledged that 32 patients had been infected with CRE by duodenoscopes from November 2012 to early 2014.", "paragraph_sentence": "Duodenoscopes have been implicated in similar outbreaks at other hospitals. In 2013, 39 patients at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, Ill., were infected with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), also the cause of the infections in Los Angeles. In January, officials at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle acknowledged that 32 patients had been infected with CRE by duodenoscopes from November 2012 to early 2014. Eleven patients died, but it is not clear that the infections were the cause, as they had other serious medical problems.", "paragraph_answer": "Duodenoscopes have been implicated in similar outbreaks at other hospitals. In 2013, 39 patients at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, Ill., were infected with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), also the cause of the infections in Los Angeles. In January, officials at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle acknowledged that 32 patients had been infected with CRE by duodenoscopes from November 2012 to early 2014. Eleven patients died, but it is not clear that the infections were the cause, as they had other serious medical problems.", "sentence_answer": "In January, officials at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle acknowledged that 32 patients had been infected with CRE by duodenoscopes from November 2012 to early 2014."} +{"question": "How many infected patients at Virginia Mason Hospital died?", "paragraph": "Duodenoscopes have been implicated in similar outbreaks at other hospitals. In 2013, 39 patients at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, Ill., were infected with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), also the cause of the infections in Los Angeles. In January, officials at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle acknowledged that 32 patients had been infected with CRE by duodenoscopes from November 2012 to early 2014. Eleven patients died, but it is not clear that the infections were the cause, as they had other serious medical problems.", "answer": "Eleven", "sentence": "Eleven patients died, but it is not clear that the infections were the cause, as they had other serious medical problems.", "paragraph_sentence": "Duodenoscopes have been implicated in similar outbreaks at other hospitals. In 2013, 39 patients at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, Ill., were infected with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), also the cause of the infections in Los Angeles. In January, officials at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle acknowledged that 32 patients had been infected with CRE by duodenoscopes from November 2012 to early 2014. Eleven patients died, but it is not clear that the infections were the cause, as they had other serious medical problems. ", "paragraph_answer": "Duodenoscopes have been implicated in similar outbreaks at other hospitals. In 2013, 39 patients at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, Ill., were infected with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), also the cause of the infections in Los Angeles. In January, officials at Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle acknowledged that 32 patients had been infected with CRE by duodenoscopes from November 2012 to early 2014. Eleven patients died, but it is not clear that the infections were the cause, as they had other serious medical problems.", "sentence_answer": " Eleven patients died, but it is not clear that the infections were the cause, as they had other serious medical problems."} +{"question": "What types of devices are hard to disinfect?", "paragraph": "The devices are uniquely difficult to disinfect, and there is no expert consensus on the best way to do so now that standard methods have been called into question. Even when health care providers \u201cappear to be doing everything right, there has been transmission of CRE,\u201d said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, the associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Makers of the special scopes defended their disinfection recommendations. John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes.\u201d Diane Rainey, a spokeswoman for Fujifilm, said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d", "answer": "duodenoscopes", "sentence": "John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "The devices are uniquely difficult to disinfect, and there is no expert consensus on the best way to do so now that standard methods have been called into question. Even when health care providers \u201cappear to be doing everything right, there has been transmission of CRE,\u201d said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, the associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Makers of the special scopes defended their disinfection recommendations. John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes .\u201d Diane Rainey, a spokeswoman for Fujifilm, said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The devices are uniquely difficult to disinfect, and there is no expert consensus on the best way to do so now that standard methods have been called into question. Even when health care providers \u201cappear to be doing everything right, there has been transmission of CRE,\u201d said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, the associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Makers of the special scopes defended their disinfection recommendations. John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes .\u201d Diane Rainey, a spokeswoman for Fujifilm, said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes .\u201d"} +{"question": "What disease has been transmitted even after seemingly proper cleaning and care?", "paragraph": "The devices are uniquely difficult to disinfect, and there is no expert consensus on the best way to do so now that standard methods have been called into question. Even when health care providers \u201cappear to be doing everything right, there has been transmission of CRE,\u201d said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, the associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Makers of the special scopes defended their disinfection recommendations. John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes.\u201d Diane Rainey, a spokeswoman for Fujifilm, said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d", "answer": "associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention", "sentence": "Even when health care providers \u201cappear to be doing everything right, there has been transmission of CRE,\u201d said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, the associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention .", "paragraph_sentence": "The devices are uniquely difficult to disinfect, and there is no expert consensus on the best way to do so now that standard methods have been called into question. Even when health care providers \u201cappear to be doing everything right, there has been transmission of CRE,\u201d said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, the associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention . Makers of the special scopes defended their disinfection recommendations. John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes.\u201d Diane Rainey, a spokeswoman for Fujifilm, said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The devices are uniquely difficult to disinfect, and there is no expert consensus on the best way to do so now that standard methods have been called into question. Even when health care providers \u201cappear to be doing everything right, there has been transmission of CRE,\u201d said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, the associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention . Makers of the special scopes defended their disinfection recommendations. John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes.\u201d Diane Rainey, a spokeswoman for Fujifilm, said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Even when health care providers \u201cappear to be doing everything right, there has been transmission of CRE,\u201d said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, the associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ."} +{"question": "John Haberstock is an employee of what company?", "paragraph": "The devices are uniquely difficult to disinfect, and there is no expert consensus on the best way to do so now that standard methods have been called into question. Even when health care providers \u201cappear to be doing everything right, there has been transmission of CRE,\u201d said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, the associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Makers of the special scopes defended their disinfection recommendations. John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes.\u201d Diane Rainey, a spokeswoman for Fujifilm, said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d", "answer": "Diane Rainey", "sentence": "John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes.\u201d Diane Rainey , a spokeswoman for Fujifilm, said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "The devices are uniquely difficult to disinfect, and there is no expert consensus on the best way to do so now that standard methods have been called into question. Even when health care providers \u201cappear to be doing everything right, there has been transmission of CRE,\u201d said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, the associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Makers of the special scopes defended their disinfection recommendations. John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes.\u201d Diane Rainey , a spokeswoman for Fujifilm, said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "The devices are uniquely difficult to disinfect, and there is no expert consensus on the best way to do so now that standard methods have been called into question. Even when health care providers \u201cappear to be doing everything right, there has been transmission of CRE,\u201d said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, the associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Makers of the special scopes defended their disinfection recommendations. John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes.\u201d Diane Rainey , a spokeswoman for Fujifilm, said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes.\u201d Diane Rainey , a spokeswoman for Fujifilm, said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d"} +{"question": "Diane Rainey works as a spokesperson for which company?", "paragraph": "The devices are uniquely difficult to disinfect, and there is no expert consensus on the best way to do so now that standard methods have been called into question. Even when health care providers \u201cappear to be doing everything right, there has been transmission of CRE,\u201d said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, the associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Makers of the special scopes defended their disinfection recommendations. John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes.\u201d Diane Rainey, a spokeswoman for Fujifilm, said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d", "answer": "Fujifilm", "sentence": "Diane Rainey, a spokeswoman for Fujifilm , said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "The devices are uniquely difficult to disinfect, and there is no expert consensus on the best way to do so now that standard methods have been called into question. Even when health care providers \u201cappear to be doing everything right, there has been transmission of CRE,\u201d said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, the associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Makers of the special scopes defended their disinfection recommendations. John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes.\u201d Diane Rainey, a spokeswoman for Fujifilm , said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "The devices are uniquely difficult to disinfect, and there is no expert consensus on the best way to do so now that standard methods have been called into question. Even when health care providers \u201cappear to be doing everything right, there has been transmission of CRE,\u201d said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, the associate director for health care associated infection prevention programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Makers of the special scopes defended their disinfection recommendations. John Haberstock, a spokesman for Pentax Medical, said its cleaning protocols achieved a \u201chigh level disinfection of duodenoscopes.\u201d Diane Rainey, a spokeswoman for Fujifilm , said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Diane Rainey, a spokeswoman for Fujifilm , said the company\u2019s instructions to providers \u201care appropriate to maintain patient safety.\u201d"} +{"question": "What is equipped at the end of a duodenoscope?", "paragraph": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "answer": "a tiny camera", "sentence": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip.", "paragraph_sentence": " A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "paragraph_answer": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "sentence_answer": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip."} +{"question": "Where is a duodenoscope inserted into the patient?", "paragraph": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "answer": "down the throat", "sentence": "It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder.", "paragraph_sentence": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "paragraph_answer": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "sentence_answer": "It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder."} +{"question": "How much bacteria can live within the tubing of a duodenoscope?", "paragraph": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "answer": "William A. Rutala", "sentence": "The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala , an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals.", "paragraph_sentence": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala , an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "paragraph_answer": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala , an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "sentence_answer": "The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala , an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals."} +{"question": "At which university hospital does William A. Rutala work?", "paragraph": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "answer": "University of North Carolina", "sentence": "The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals.", "paragraph_sentence": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "paragraph_answer": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "sentence_answer": "The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals."} +{"question": "How many bacteria might a surgical forceps harbor after use?", "paragraph": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "answer": "roughly 100 bacteria", "sentence": "By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "paragraph_sentence": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays. ", "paragraph_answer": "A duodenoscope is a long, flexible tube with a tiny camera at the tip. It is typically inserted down the throat of an anesthetized patient to examine the very small ducts that drain the liver or gallbladder. The inner tubing is intricate and difficult to clean, and can harbor up to 10 billion individual bacteria, said William A. Rutala, an infection control specialist at University of North Carolina Hospitals. By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays.", "sentence_answer": "By contrast, a surgical forceps may have roughly 100 bacteria on its surface after use in the operating room, he said, and is easily cleaned with heat, detergents and high-pressure sprays."} +{"question": "What is one measure the FDA is considering to improve the safety of duodenoscopes?", "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": "Advocate Lutheran General Hospital", "sentence": "Ronald Reagan U.C.L.A. Medical Center and Advocate Lutheran General Hospital have begun sterilizing their instruments with a gas called ethylene oxide.", "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. \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.", "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. \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.", "sentence_answer": "Ronald Reagan U.C.L.A. Medical Center and Advocate Lutheran General Hospital have begun sterilizing their instruments with a gas called ethylene oxide."} +{"question": "What substance has Advocate Lutheran General Hospital begun using to sterilize their equipment?", "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": "ethylene oxide sterilization", "sentence": "At the moment, however, the F.D.A. is not willing to recommend ethylene oxide sterilization on a routine basis.", "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. \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.", "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. \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.", "sentence_answer": "At the moment, however, the F.D.A. is not willing to recommend ethylene oxide sterilization on a routine basis."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What is a second measure being considered by the FDA to address the concern with duodenoscopes?", "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": "sampling them for microbiological cultures periodically", "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 .", "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. \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.", "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. \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.", "sentence_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 ."} +{"question": "What agency is looking into more measures to increase duodenoscope safety?", "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": "The F.D.A.", "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.", "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. \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.", "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. \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.", "sentence_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."} +{"question": "What did Mr. Lloyd think about rock?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhat that did for me, at that impressionable age, was make theater and rock \u2019n\u2019 roll indistinguishable,\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. \u201cI just thought rock was about theater, and rather old variety theater, at that.\u201d Years later, he and Tim Rice recorded the original 1970 concept album for \u201cJesus Christ Superstar\u201d \u2014 hailed, in its own time, as revolutionary and denounced as sacrilegious \u2014 at London\u2019s Olympic Studios, next door to Led Zeppelin.", "answer": "was about theater", "sentence": "\u201cI just thought rock was about theater , and rather old variety theater, at that.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhat that did for me, at that impressionable age, was make theater and rock \u2019n\u2019 roll indistinguishable,\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. \u201cI just thought rock was about theater , and rather old variety theater, at that.\u201d Years later, he and Tim Rice recorded the original 1970 concept album for \u201cJesus Christ Superstar\u201d \u2014 hailed, in its own time, as revolutionary and denounced as sacrilegious \u2014 at London\u2019s Olympic Studios, next door to Led Zeppelin.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhat that did for me, at that impressionable age, was make theater and rock \u2019n\u2019 roll indistinguishable,\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. \u201cI just thought rock was about theater , and rather old variety theater, at that.\u201d Years later, he and Tim Rice recorded the original 1970 concept album for \u201cJesus Christ Superstar\u201d \u2014 hailed, in its own time, as revolutionary and denounced as sacrilegious \u2014 at London\u2019s Olympic Studios, next door to Led Zeppelin.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI just thought rock was about theater , and rather old variety theater, at that.\u201d"} +{"question": "In what year Time Rice recorded his revolutionary album?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhat that did for me, at that impressionable age, was make theater and rock \u2019n\u2019 roll indistinguishable,\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. \u201cI just thought rock was about theater, and rather old variety theater, at that.\u201d Years later, he and Tim Rice recorded the original 1970 concept album for \u201cJesus Christ Superstar\u201d \u2014 hailed, in its own time, as revolutionary and denounced as sacrilegious \u2014 at London\u2019s Olympic Studios, next door to Led Zeppelin.", "answer": "1970", "sentence": "Years later, he and Tim Rice recorded the original 1970 concept album for \u201cJesus Christ Superstar\u201d \u2014 hailed, in its own time, as revolutionary and denounced as sacrilegious \u2014 at London\u2019s Olympic Studios, next door to Led Zeppelin.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhat that did for me, at that impressionable age, was make theater and rock \u2019n\u2019 roll indistinguishable,\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. \u201cI just thought rock was about theater, and rather old variety theater, at that.\u201d Years later, he and Tim Rice recorded the original 1970 concept album for \u201cJesus Christ Superstar\u201d \u2014 hailed, in its own time, as revolutionary and denounced as sacrilegious \u2014 at London\u2019s Olympic Studios, next door to Led Zeppelin. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhat that did for me, at that impressionable age, was make theater and rock \u2019n\u2019 roll indistinguishable,\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. \u201cI just thought rock was about theater, and rather old variety theater, at that.\u201d Years later, he and Tim Rice recorded the original 1970 concept album for \u201cJesus Christ Superstar\u201d \u2014 hailed, in its own time, as revolutionary and denounced as sacrilegious \u2014 at London\u2019s Olympic Studios, next door to Led Zeppelin.", "sentence_answer": "Years later, he and Tim Rice recorded the original 1970 concept album for \u201cJesus Christ Superstar\u201d \u2014 hailed, in its own time, as revolutionary and denounced as sacrilegious \u2014 at London\u2019s Olympic Studios, next door to Led Zeppelin."} +{"question": "What was the name of Time Rice' album?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhat that did for me, at that impressionable age, was make theater and rock \u2019n\u2019 roll indistinguishable,\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. \u201cI just thought rock was about theater, and rather old variety theater, at that.\u201d Years later, he and Tim Rice recorded the original 1970 concept album for \u201cJesus Christ Superstar\u201d \u2014 hailed, in its own time, as revolutionary and denounced as sacrilegious \u2014 at London\u2019s Olympic Studios, next door to Led Zeppelin.", "answer": "\u201cJesus Christ Superstar\u201d", "sentence": "Years later, he and Tim Rice recorded the original 1970 concept album for \u201cJesus Christ Superstar\u201d \u2014 hailed, in its own time, as revolutionary and denounced as sacrilegious \u2014 at London\u2019s Olympic Studios, next door to Led Zeppelin.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhat that did for me, at that impressionable age, was make theater and rock \u2019n\u2019 roll indistinguishable,\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. \u201cI just thought rock was about theater, and rather old variety theater, at that.\u201d Years later, he and Tim Rice recorded the original 1970 concept album for \u201cJesus Christ Superstar\u201d \u2014 hailed, in its own time, as revolutionary and denounced as sacrilegious \u2014 at London\u2019s Olympic Studios, next door to Led Zeppelin. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhat that did for me, at that impressionable age, was make theater and rock \u2019n\u2019 roll indistinguishable,\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. \u201cI just thought rock was about theater, and rather old variety theater, at that.\u201d Years later, he and Tim Rice recorded the original 1970 concept album for \u201cJesus Christ Superstar\u201d \u2014 hailed, in its own time, as revolutionary and denounced as sacrilegious \u2014 at London\u2019s Olympic Studios, next door to Led Zeppelin.", "sentence_answer": "Years later, he and Tim Rice recorded the original 1970 concept album for \u201cJesus Christ Superstar\u201d \u2014 hailed, in its own time, as revolutionary and denounced as sacrilegious \u2014 at London\u2019s Olympic Studios, next door to Led Zeppelin."} +{"question": "Where was Time Rice' album recorded?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhat that did for me, at that impressionable age, was make theater and rock \u2019n\u2019 roll indistinguishable,\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. \u201cI just thought rock was about theater, and rather old variety theater, at that.\u201d Years later, he and Tim Rice recorded the original 1970 concept album for \u201cJesus Christ Superstar\u201d \u2014 hailed, in its own time, as revolutionary and denounced as sacrilegious \u2014 at London\u2019s Olympic Studios, next door to Led Zeppelin.", "answer": "at London\u2019s Olympic Studios", "sentence": "Years later, he and Tim Rice recorded the original 1970 concept album for \u201cJesus Christ Superstar\u201d \u2014 hailed, in its own time, as revolutionary and denounced as sacrilegious \u2014 at London\u2019s Olympic Studios , next door to Led Zeppelin.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhat that did for me, at that impressionable age, was make theater and rock \u2019n\u2019 roll indistinguishable,\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. \u201cI just thought rock was about theater, and rather old variety theater, at that.\u201d Years later, he and Tim Rice recorded the original 1970 concept album for \u201cJesus Christ Superstar\u201d \u2014 hailed, in its own time, as revolutionary and denounced as sacrilegious \u2014 at London\u2019s Olympic Studios , next door to Led Zeppelin. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhat that did for me, at that impressionable age, was make theater and rock \u2019n\u2019 roll indistinguishable,\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. \u201cI just thought rock was about theater, and rather old variety theater, at that.\u201d Years later, he and Tim Rice recorded the original 1970 concept album for \u201cJesus Christ Superstar\u201d \u2014 hailed, in its own time, as revolutionary and denounced as sacrilegious \u2014 at London\u2019s Olympic Studios , next door to Led Zeppelin.", "sentence_answer": "Years later, he and Tim Rice recorded the original 1970 concept album for \u201cJesus Christ Superstar\u201d \u2014 hailed, in its own time, as revolutionary and denounced as sacrilegious \u2014 at London\u2019s Olympic Studios , next door to Led Zeppelin."} +{"question": "Where Time Rice traveled for his Broadway debut?", "paragraph": "And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut. But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan, as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d The production was too ornate and too glitzy by his reckoning, and he was powerless to stop it. \u201cWhat can you do if you\u2019re 23 years old?\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. Four decades later, Mr. Lloyd Webber and his company, the Really Useful Group, allow no such leeway with their worldwide productions of \u201cPhantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d which was recently revived on the West End and is being eyed for a Broadway return.", "answer": "New York", "sentence": "And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut.", "paragraph_sentence": " And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut. But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan, as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d The production was too ornate and too glitzy by his reckoning, and he was powerless to stop it. \u201cWhat can you do if you\u2019re 23 years old?\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. Four decades later, Mr. Lloyd Webber and his company, the Really Useful Group, allow no such leeway with their worldwide productions of \u201cPhantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d which was recently revived on the West End and is being eyed for a Broadway return.", "paragraph_answer": "And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut. But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan, as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d The production was too ornate and too glitzy by his reckoning, and he was powerless to stop it. \u201cWhat can you do if you\u2019re 23 years old?\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. Four decades later, Mr. Lloyd Webber and his company, the Really Useful Group, allow no such leeway with their worldwide productions of \u201cPhantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d which was recently revived on the West End and is being eyed for a Broadway return.", "sentence_answer": "And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut."} +{"question": "Who produced the Broadway debut?", "paragraph": "And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut. But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan, as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d The production was too ornate and too glitzy by his reckoning, and he was powerless to stop it. \u201cWhat can you do if you\u2019re 23 years old?\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. Four decades later, Mr. Lloyd Webber and his company, the Really Useful Group, allow no such leeway with their worldwide productions of \u201cPhantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d which was recently revived on the West End and is being eyed for a Broadway return.", "answer": "Robert Stigwood", "sentence": "But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan, as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut. But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan, as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d The production was too ornate and too glitzy by his reckoning, and he was powerless to stop it. \u201cWhat can you do if you\u2019re 23 years old?\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. Four decades later, Mr. Lloyd Webber and his company, the Really Useful Group, allow no such leeway with their worldwide productions of \u201cPhantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d which was recently revived on the West End and is being eyed for a Broadway return.", "paragraph_answer": "And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut. But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan, as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d The production was too ornate and too glitzy by his reckoning, and he was powerless to stop it. \u201cWhat can you do if you\u2019re 23 years old?\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. Four decades later, Mr. Lloyd Webber and his company, the Really Useful Group, allow no such leeway with their worldwide productions of \u201cPhantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d which was recently revived on the West End and is being eyed for a Broadway return.", "sentence_answer": "But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan, as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d"} +{"question": "By who was the Broadway debut directed?", "paragraph": "And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut. But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan, as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d The production was too ornate and too glitzy by his reckoning, and he was powerless to stop it. \u201cWhat can you do if you\u2019re 23 years old?\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. Four decades later, Mr. Lloyd Webber and his company, the Really Useful Group, allow no such leeway with their worldwide productions of \u201cPhantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d which was recently revived on the West End and is being eyed for a Broadway return.", "answer": "by Tom O\u2019Horgan", "sentence": "But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan , as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut. But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan , as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d The production was too ornate and too glitzy by his reckoning, and he was powerless to stop it. \u201cWhat can you do if you\u2019re 23 years old?\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. Four decades later, Mr. Lloyd Webber and his company, the Really Useful Group, allow no such leeway with their worldwide productions of \u201cPhantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d which was recently revived on the West End and is being eyed for a Broadway return.", "paragraph_answer": "And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut. But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan , as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d The production was too ornate and too glitzy by his reckoning, and he was powerless to stop it. \u201cWhat can you do if you\u2019re 23 years old?\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. Four decades later, Mr. Lloyd Webber and his company, the Really Useful Group, allow no such leeway with their worldwide productions of \u201cPhantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d which was recently revived on the West End and is being eyed for a Broadway return.", "sentence_answer": "But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan , as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d"} +{"question": "Which worldwide production were led by Mr. Lloyd company?", "paragraph": "And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut. But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan, as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d The production was too ornate and too glitzy by his reckoning, and he was powerless to stop it. \u201cWhat can you do if you\u2019re 23 years old?\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. Four decades later, Mr. Lloyd Webber and his company, the Really Useful Group, allow no such leeway with their worldwide productions of \u201cPhantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d which was recently revived on the West End and is being eyed for a Broadway return.", "answer": "Phantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d", "sentence": "Four decades later, Mr. Lloyd Webber and his company, the Really Useful Group, allow no such leeway with their worldwide productions of \u201c Phantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d which was recently revived on the West End and is being eyed for a Broadway return.", "paragraph_sentence": "And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut. But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan, as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d The production was too ornate and too glitzy by his reckoning, and he was powerless to stop it. \u201cWhat can you do if you\u2019re 23 years old?\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. Four decades later, Mr. Lloyd Webber and his company, the Really Useful Group, allow no such leeway with their worldwide productions of \u201c Phantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d which was recently revived on the West End and is being eyed for a Broadway return. ", "paragraph_answer": "And they got their own taste of pop stardom the following year, when they traveled to New York for its Broadway debut. But Mr. Lloyd Webber recalls his first viewing of that show, produced by Robert Stigwood and directed by Tom O\u2019Horgan, as \u201cthe worst day of my life.\u201d The production was too ornate and too glitzy by his reckoning, and he was powerless to stop it. \u201cWhat can you do if you\u2019re 23 years old?\u201d Mr. Lloyd Webber said. Four decades later, Mr. Lloyd Webber and his company, the Really Useful Group, allow no such leeway with their worldwide productions of \u201c Phantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d which was recently revived on the West End and is being eyed for a Broadway return.", "sentence_answer": "Four decades later, Mr. Lloyd Webber and his company, the Really Useful Group, allow no such leeway with their worldwide productions of \u201c Phantom,\u201d \u201cSuperstar\u201d and \u201cCats,\u201d which was recently revived on the West End and is being eyed for a Broadway return."} +{"question": "Who is Alastair?", "paragraph": "\u201cIf he hears about a hot show, he\u2019ll be there,\u201d said Alastair, 23, a junior A&R manager at that label. At his father\u2019s age, Alastair said, \u201cyou would think most people have sat back, drinking tea somewhere. But he\u2019s out there, trying to find the next thing.\u201d Alastair said that as a child, his father turned him on to bands like the Beatles, Led Zeppelin and the Clash, as well as composers like Prokofiev and Shostakovich. The movie \u201cSchool of Rock,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201cabout 40 times.\u201d", "answer": "a junior A&R manager", "sentence": "\u201cIf he hears about a hot show, he\u2019ll be there,\u201d said Alastair, 23, a junior A&R manager at that label.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cIf he hears about a hot show, he\u2019ll be there,\u201d said Alastair, 23, a junior A&R manager at that label. At his father\u2019s age, Alastair said, \u201cyou would think most people have sat back, drinking tea somewhere. But he\u2019s out there, trying to find the next thing.\u201d Alastair said that as a child, his father turned him on to bands like the Beatles, Led Zeppelin and the Clash, as well as composers like Prokofiev and Shostakovich. The movie \u201cSchool of Rock,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201cabout 40 times.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIf he hears about a hot show, he\u2019ll be there,\u201d said Alastair, 23, a junior A&R manager at that label. At his father\u2019s age, Alastair said, \u201cyou would think most people have sat back, drinking tea somewhere. But he\u2019s out there, trying to find the next thing.\u201d Alastair said that as a child, his father turned him on to bands like the Beatles, Led Zeppelin and the Clash, as well as composers like Prokofiev and Shostakovich. The movie \u201cSchool of Rock,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201cabout 40 times.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIf he hears about a hot show, he\u2019ll be there,\u201d said Alastair, 23, a junior A&R manager at that label."} +{"question": "How old is Alastair?", "paragraph": "\u201cIf he hears about a hot show, he\u2019ll be there,\u201d said Alastair, 23, a junior A&R manager at that label. At his father\u2019s age, Alastair said, \u201cyou would think most people have sat back, drinking tea somewhere. But he\u2019s out there, trying to find the next thing.\u201d Alastair said that as a child, his father turned him on to bands like the Beatles, Led Zeppelin and the Clash, as well as composers like Prokofiev and Shostakovich. The movie \u201cSchool of Rock,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201cabout 40 times.\u201d", "answer": "23", "sentence": "\u201cIf he hears about a hot show, he\u2019ll be there,\u201d said Alastair, 23 , a junior A&R manager at that label.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cIf he hears about a hot show, he\u2019ll be there,\u201d said Alastair, 23 , a junior A&R manager at that label. At his father\u2019s age, Alastair said, \u201cyou would think most people have sat back, drinking tea somewhere. But he\u2019s out there, trying to find the next thing.\u201d Alastair said that as a child, his father turned him on to bands like the Beatles, Led Zeppelin and the Clash, as well as composers like Prokofiev and Shostakovich. The movie \u201cSchool of Rock,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201cabout 40 times.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIf he hears about a hot show, he\u2019ll be there,\u201d said Alastair, 23 , a junior A&R manager at that label. At his father\u2019s age, Alastair said, \u201cyou would think most people have sat back, drinking tea somewhere. But he\u2019s out there, trying to find the next thing.\u201d Alastair said that as a child, his father turned him on to bands like the Beatles, Led Zeppelin and the Clash, as well as composers like Prokofiev and Shostakovich. The movie \u201cSchool of Rock,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201cabout 40 times.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIf he hears about a hot show, he\u2019ll be there,\u201d said Alastair, 23 , a junior A&R manager at that label."} +{"question": "Who wrote he movie School of Rock?", "paragraph": "\u201cIf he hears about a hot show, he\u2019ll be there,\u201d said Alastair, 23, a junior A&R manager at that label. At his father\u2019s age, Alastair said, \u201cyou would think most people have sat back, drinking tea somewhere. But he\u2019s out there, trying to find the next thing.\u201d Alastair said that as a child, his father turned him on to bands like the Beatles, Led Zeppelin and the Clash, as well as composers like Prokofiev and Shostakovich. The movie \u201cSchool of Rock,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201cabout 40 times.\u201d", "answer": "Mike White", "sentence": "The movie \u201cSchool of Rock,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201cabout 40 times.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIf he hears about a hot show, he\u2019ll be there,\u201d said Alastair, 23, a junior A&R manager at that label. At his father\u2019s age, Alastair said, \u201cyou would think most people have sat back, drinking tea somewhere. But he\u2019s out there, trying to find the next thing.\u201d Alastair said that as a child, his father turned him on to bands like the Beatles, Led Zeppelin and the Clash, as well as composers like Prokofiev and Shostakovich. The movie \u201cSchool of Rock,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201cabout 40 times.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIf he hears about a hot show, he\u2019ll be there,\u201d said Alastair, 23, a junior A&R manager at that label. At his father\u2019s age, Alastair said, \u201cyou would think most people have sat back, drinking tea somewhere. But he\u2019s out there, trying to find the next thing.\u201d Alastair said that as a child, his father turned him on to bands like the Beatles, Led Zeppelin and the Clash, as well as composers like Prokofiev and Shostakovich. The movie \u201cSchool of Rock,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201cabout 40 times.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The movie \u201cSchool of Rock,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201cabout 40 times.\u201d"} +{"question": "Which movie was played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household?", "paragraph": "\u201cIf he hears about a hot show, he\u2019ll be there,\u201d said Alastair, 23, a junior A&R manager at that label. At his father\u2019s age, Alastair said, \u201cyou would think most people have sat back, drinking tea somewhere. But he\u2019s out there, trying to find the next thing.\u201d Alastair said that as a child, his father turned him on to bands like the Beatles, Led Zeppelin and the Clash, as well as composers like Prokofiev and Shostakovich. The movie \u201cSchool of Rock,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201cabout 40 times.\u201d", "answer": "School of Rock", "sentence": "The movie \u201c School of Rock ,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201cabout 40 times.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIf he hears about a hot show, he\u2019ll be there,\u201d said Alastair, 23, a junior A&R manager at that label. At his father\u2019s age, Alastair said, \u201cyou would think most people have sat back, drinking tea somewhere. But he\u2019s out there, trying to find the next thing.\u201d Alastair said that as a child, his father turned him on to bands like the Beatles, Led Zeppelin and the Clash, as well as composers like Prokofiev and Shostakovich. The movie \u201c School of Rock ,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201cabout 40 times.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIf he hears about a hot show, he\u2019ll be there,\u201d said Alastair, 23, a junior A&R manager at that label. At his father\u2019s age, Alastair said, \u201cyou would think most people have sat back, drinking tea somewhere. But he\u2019s out there, trying to find the next thing.\u201d Alastair said that as a child, his father turned him on to bands like the Beatles, Led Zeppelin and the Clash, as well as composers like Prokofiev and Shostakovich. The movie \u201c School of Rock ,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201cabout 40 times.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The movie \u201c School of Rock ,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201cabout 40 times.\u201d"} +{"question": "How many times does Alastair estimate he had watched the movie School of Rock?", "paragraph": "\u201cIf he hears about a hot show, he\u2019ll be there,\u201d said Alastair, 23, a junior A&R manager at that label. At his father\u2019s age, Alastair said, \u201cyou would think most people have sat back, drinking tea somewhere. But he\u2019s out there, trying to find the next thing.\u201d Alastair said that as a child, his father turned him on to bands like the Beatles, Led Zeppelin and the Clash, as well as composers like Prokofiev and Shostakovich. The movie \u201cSchool of Rock,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201cabout 40 times.\u201d", "answer": "about 40 times.", "sentence": "The movie \u201cSchool of Rock,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201c about 40 times. \u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIf he hears about a hot show, he\u2019ll be there,\u201d said Alastair, 23, a junior A&R manager at that label. At his father\u2019s age, Alastair said, \u201cyou would think most people have sat back, drinking tea somewhere. But he\u2019s out there, trying to find the next thing.\u201d Alastair said that as a child, his father turned him on to bands like the Beatles, Led Zeppelin and the Clash, as well as composers like Prokofiev and Shostakovich. The movie \u201cSchool of Rock,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201c about 40 times. \u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIf he hears about a hot show, he\u2019ll be there,\u201d said Alastair, 23, a junior A&R manager at that label. At his father\u2019s age, Alastair said, \u201cyou would think most people have sat back, drinking tea somewhere. But he\u2019s out there, trying to find the next thing.\u201d Alastair said that as a child, his father turned him on to bands like the Beatles, Led Zeppelin and the Clash, as well as composers like Prokofiev and Shostakovich. The movie \u201cSchool of Rock,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201c about 40 times. \u201d", "sentence_answer": "The movie \u201cSchool of Rock,\u201d written by Mike White and directed by Richard Linklater, was also played frequently in the Lloyd Webber household, with Alastair estimating that he has watched it \u201c about 40 times. \u201d"} +{"question": "Who is the lyricist of he movie School of Rock?", "paragraph": "Glenn Slater, the \u201cSchool of Rock\u201d lyricist, said he thought Mr. Lloyd Webber \u201chad a little more self-doubt\u201d as he decided between writing in the mode of 1960s classic rock or 1970s heavy metal. Mr. Slater, who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman: huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d At that point, Mr. Slater said, \u201cHe perked up and said, \u2018Oh, I\u2019ve worked with Jim Steinman.\u2019\u201d (Together they wrote the musical \u201cWhistle Down the Wind.\u201d)", "answer": "Glenn Slater,", "sentence": "Glenn Slater, the \u201cSchool of Rock\u201d lyricist, said he thought Mr. Lloyd Webber \u201chad a little more self-doubt\u201d as he decided between writing in the mode of 1960s classic rock or 1970s heavy metal.", "paragraph_sentence": " Glenn Slater, the \u201cSchool of Rock\u201d lyricist, said he thought Mr. Lloyd Webber \u201chad a little more self-doubt\u201d as he decided between writing in the mode of 1960s classic rock or 1970s heavy metal. Mr. Slater, who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman: huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d At that point, Mr. Slater said, \u201cHe perked up and said, \u2018Oh, I\u2019ve worked with Jim Steinman.\u2019\u201d (Together they wrote the musical \u201cWhistle Down the Wind.\u201d)", "paragraph_answer": " Glenn Slater, the \u201cSchool of Rock\u201d lyricist, said he thought Mr. Lloyd Webber \u201chad a little more self-doubt\u201d as he decided between writing in the mode of 1960s classic rock or 1970s heavy metal. Mr. Slater, who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman: huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d At that point, Mr. Slater said, \u201cHe perked up and said, \u2018Oh, I\u2019ve worked with Jim Steinman.\u2019\u201d (Together they wrote the musical \u201cWhistle Down the Wind.\u201d)", "sentence_answer": " Glenn Slater, the \u201cSchool of Rock\u201d lyricist, said he thought Mr. Lloyd Webber \u201chad a little more self-doubt\u201d as he decided between writing in the mode of 1960s classic rock or 1970s heavy metal."} +{"question": "What was Mr. Lloyd 'style according to Mr. Slater?", "paragraph": "Glenn Slater, the \u201cSchool of Rock\u201d lyricist, said he thought Mr. Lloyd Webber \u201chad a little more self-doubt\u201d as he decided between writing in the mode of 1960s classic rock or 1970s heavy metal. Mr. Slater, who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman: huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d At that point, Mr. Slater said, \u201cHe perked up and said, \u2018Oh, I\u2019ve worked with Jim Steinman.\u2019\u201d (Together they wrote the musical \u201cWhistle Down the Wind.\u201d)", "answer": "1960s classic rock or 1970s heavy metal", "sentence": "Glenn Slater, the \u201cSchool of Rock\u201d lyricist, said he thought Mr. Lloyd Webber \u201chad a little more self-doubt\u201d as he decided between writing in the mode of 1960s classic rock or 1970s heavy metal .", "paragraph_sentence": " Glenn Slater, the \u201cSchool of Rock\u201d lyricist, said he thought Mr. Lloyd Webber \u201chad a little more self-doubt\u201d as he decided between writing in the mode of 1960s classic rock or 1970s heavy metal . Mr. Slater, who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman: huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d At that point, Mr. Slater said, \u201cHe perked up and said, \u2018Oh, I\u2019ve worked with Jim Steinman.\u2019\u201d (Together they wrote the musical \u201cWhistle Down the Wind.\u201d)", "paragraph_answer": "Glenn Slater, the \u201cSchool of Rock\u201d lyricist, said he thought Mr. Lloyd Webber \u201chad a little more self-doubt\u201d as he decided between writing in the mode of 1960s classic rock or 1970s heavy metal . Mr. Slater, who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman: huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d At that point, Mr. Slater said, \u201cHe perked up and said, \u2018Oh, I\u2019ve worked with Jim Steinman.\u2019\u201d (Together they wrote the musical \u201cWhistle Down the Wind.\u201d)", "sentence_answer": "Glenn Slater, the \u201cSchool of Rock\u201d lyricist, said he thought Mr. Lloyd Webber \u201chad a little more self-doubt\u201d as he decided between writing in the mode of 1960s classic rock or 1970s heavy metal ."} +{"question": "Who worked on Love Never Dies?", "paragraph": "Glenn Slater, the \u201cSchool of Rock\u201d lyricist, said he thought Mr. Lloyd Webber \u201chad a little more self-doubt\u201d as he decided between writing in the mode of 1960s classic rock or 1970s heavy metal. Mr. Slater, who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman: huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d At that point, Mr. Slater said, \u201cHe perked up and said, \u2018Oh, I\u2019ve worked with Jim Steinman.\u2019\u201d (Together they wrote the musical \u201cWhistle Down the Wind.\u201d)", "answer": "Mr. Slater", "sentence": "Mr. Slater , who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman: huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Glenn Slater, the \u201cSchool of Rock\u201d lyricist, said he thought Mr. Lloyd Webber \u201chad a little more self-doubt\u201d as he decided between writing in the mode of 1960s classic rock or 1970s heavy metal. Mr. Slater , who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman: huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d At that point, Mr. Slater said, \u201cHe perked up and said, \u2018Oh, I\u2019ve worked with Jim Steinman.\u2019\u201d (Together they wrote the musical \u201cWhistle Down the Wind.\u201d)", "paragraph_answer": "Glenn Slater, the \u201cSchool of Rock\u201d lyricist, said he thought Mr. Lloyd Webber \u201chad a little more self-doubt\u201d as he decided between writing in the mode of 1960s classic rock or 1970s heavy metal. Mr. Slater , who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman: huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d At that point, Mr. Slater said, \u201cHe perked up and said, \u2018Oh, I\u2019ve worked with Jim Steinman.\u2019\u201d (Together they wrote the musical \u201cWhistle Down the Wind.\u201d)", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Slater , who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman: huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d"} +{"question": "Who Mr. Slater wrote the musical Whistle Down the Wind with?", "paragraph": "Glenn Slater, the \u201cSchool of Rock\u201d lyricist, said he thought Mr. Lloyd Webber \u201chad a little more self-doubt\u201d as he decided between writing in the mode of 1960s classic rock or 1970s heavy metal. Mr. Slater, who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman: huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d At that point, Mr. Slater said, \u201cHe perked up and said, \u2018Oh, I\u2019ve worked with Jim Steinman.\u2019\u201d (Together they wrote the musical \u201cWhistle Down the Wind.\u201d)", "answer": "Jim Steinman", "sentence": "Mr. Slater, who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman : huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Glenn Slater, the \u201cSchool of Rock\u201d lyricist, said he thought Mr. Lloyd Webber \u201chad a little more self-doubt\u201d as he decided between writing in the mode of 1960s classic rock or 1970s heavy metal. Mr. Slater, who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman : huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d At that point, Mr. Slater said, \u201cHe perked up and said, \u2018Oh, I\u2019ve worked with Jim Steinman.\u2019\u201d (Together they wrote the musical \u201cWhistle Down the Wind.\u201d)", "paragraph_answer": "Glenn Slater, the \u201cSchool of Rock\u201d lyricist, said he thought Mr. Lloyd Webber \u201chad a little more self-doubt\u201d as he decided between writing in the mode of 1960s classic rock or 1970s heavy metal. Mr. Slater, who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman : huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d At that point, Mr. Slater said, \u201cHe perked up and said, \u2018Oh, I\u2019ve worked with Jim Steinman.\u2019\u201d (Together they wrote the musical \u201cWhistle Down the Wind.\u201d)", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Slater, who also worked on \u201cLove Never Dies,\u201d said that he suggested to Mr. Lloyd Webber, \u201cWe should think of it like Meat Loaf or Jim Steinman : huge, operatic, over-the-top rock.\u201d"} +{"question": "Which song was a radio hit from Mr. Lloyd's adolescence?", "paragraph": "It can be read as an ode to Mr. Lloyd Webber\u2019s rock \u2019n\u2019 roll coming-of-age, containing snippets of the Rolling Stones\u2019 \u201c(I Can\u2019t Get No) Satisfaction\u201d (an inescapable radio hit from his adolescence); Deep Purple\u2019s \u201cSmoke on the Water\u201d (a nod to that band\u2019s lead singer, Ian Gillan, the original Jesus of \u201cSuperstar\u201d); and \u201cWalk on the Wild Side,\u201d by Lou Reed (whose music was ubiquitous on his early visits to New York). Looking solely at the show\u2019s creative team, Mr. Slater acknowledged, \u201cCertainly, from a socio-economic standpoint, this is not the most obvious group to make \u2018School of Rock \u2014 The Musical.\u2019\u201d", "answer": "\u201c(I Can\u2019t Get No) Satisfaction\u201d", "sentence": "It can be read as an ode to Mr. Lloyd Webber\u2019s rock \u2019n\u2019 roll coming-of-age, containing snippets of the Rolling Stones\u2019 \u201c(I Can\u2019t Get No) Satisfaction\u201d (an inescapable radio hit from his adolescence); Deep Purple\u2019s \u201cSmoke on the Water\u201d (a nod to that band\u2019s lead singer, Ian Gillan, the original Jesus of \u201cSuperstar\u201d); and \u201cWalk on the Wild Side,\u201d by Lou Reed (whose music was ubiquitous on his early visits to New York).", "paragraph_sentence": " It can be read as an ode to Mr. Lloyd Webber\u2019s rock \u2019n\u2019 roll coming-of-age, containing snippets of the Rolling Stones\u2019 \u201c(I Can\u2019t Get No) Satisfaction\u201d (an inescapable radio hit from his adolescence); Deep Purple\u2019s \u201cSmoke on the Water\u201d (a nod to that band\u2019s lead singer, Ian Gillan, the original Jesus of \u201cSuperstar\u201d); and \u201cWalk on the Wild Side,\u201d by Lou Reed (whose music was ubiquitous on his early visits to New York). Looking solely at the show\u2019s creative team, Mr. Slater acknowledged, \u201cCertainly, from a socio-economic standpoint, this is not the most obvious group to make \u2018School of Rock \u2014 The Musical.\u2019\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "It can be read as an ode to Mr. Lloyd Webber\u2019s rock \u2019n\u2019 roll coming-of-age, containing snippets of the Rolling Stones\u2019 \u201c(I Can\u2019t Get No) Satisfaction\u201d (an inescapable radio hit from his adolescence); Deep Purple\u2019s \u201cSmoke on the Water\u201d (a nod to that band\u2019s lead singer, Ian Gillan, the original Jesus of \u201cSuperstar\u201d); and \u201cWalk on the Wild Side,\u201d by Lou Reed (whose music was ubiquitous on his early visits to New York). Looking solely at the show\u2019s creative team, Mr. Slater acknowledged, \u201cCertainly, from a socio-economic standpoint, this is not the most obvious group to make \u2018School of Rock \u2014 The Musical.\u2019\u201d", "sentence_answer": "It can be read as an ode to Mr. Lloyd Webber\u2019s rock \u2019n\u2019 roll coming-of-age, containing snippets of the Rolling Stones\u2019 \u201c(I Can\u2019t Get No) Satisfaction\u201d (an inescapable radio hit from his adolescence); Deep Purple\u2019s \u201cSmoke on the Water\u201d (a nod to that band\u2019s lead singer, Ian Gillan, the original Jesus of \u201cSuperstar\u201d); and \u201cWalk on the Wild Side,\u201d by Lou Reed (whose music was ubiquitous on his early visits to New York)."} +{"question": "Who sings: Smoke on the Water?", "paragraph": "It can be read as an ode to Mr. Lloyd Webber\u2019s rock \u2019n\u2019 roll coming-of-age, containing snippets of the Rolling Stones\u2019 \u201c(I Can\u2019t Get No) Satisfaction\u201d (an inescapable radio hit from his adolescence); Deep Purple\u2019s \u201cSmoke on the Water\u201d (a nod to that band\u2019s lead singer, Ian Gillan, the original Jesus of \u201cSuperstar\u201d); and \u201cWalk on the Wild Side,\u201d by Lou Reed (whose music was ubiquitous on his early visits to New York). Looking solely at the show\u2019s creative team, Mr. Slater acknowledged, \u201cCertainly, from a socio-economic standpoint, this is not the most obvious group to make \u2018School of Rock \u2014 The Musical.\u2019\u201d", "answer": "Ian Gillan", "sentence": "It can be read as an ode to Mr. Lloyd Webber\u2019s rock \u2019n\u2019 roll coming-of-age, containing snippets of the Rolling Stones\u2019 \u201c(I Can\u2019t Get No) Satisfaction\u201d (an inescapable radio hit from his adolescence); Deep Purple\u2019s \u201cSmoke on the Water\u201d (a nod to that band\u2019s lead singer, Ian Gillan , the original Jesus of \u201cSuperstar\u201d); and \u201cWalk on the Wild Side,\u201d by Lou Reed (whose music was ubiquitous on his early visits to New York).", "paragraph_sentence": " It can be read as an ode to Mr. Lloyd Webber\u2019s rock \u2019n\u2019 roll coming-of-age, containing snippets of the Rolling Stones\u2019 \u201c(I Can\u2019t Get No) Satisfaction\u201d (an inescapable radio hit from his adolescence); Deep Purple\u2019s \u201cSmoke on the Water\u201d (a nod to that band\u2019s lead singer, Ian Gillan , the original Jesus of \u201cSuperstar\u201d); and \u201cWalk on the Wild Side,\u201d by Lou Reed (whose music was ubiquitous on his early visits to New York). Looking solely at the show\u2019s creative team, Mr. Slater acknowledged, \u201cCertainly, from a socio-economic standpoint, this is not the most obvious group to make \u2018School of Rock \u2014 The Musical.\u2019\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "It can be read as an ode to Mr. Lloyd Webber\u2019s rock \u2019n\u2019 roll coming-of-age, containing snippets of the Rolling Stones\u2019 \u201c(I Can\u2019t Get No) Satisfaction\u201d (an inescapable radio hit from his adolescence); Deep Purple\u2019s \u201cSmoke on the Water\u201d (a nod to that band\u2019s lead singer, Ian Gillan , the original Jesus of \u201cSuperstar\u201d); and \u201cWalk on the Wild Side,\u201d by Lou Reed (whose music was ubiquitous on his early visits to New York). Looking solely at the show\u2019s creative team, Mr. Slater acknowledged, \u201cCertainly, from a socio-economic standpoint, this is not the most obvious group to make \u2018School of Rock \u2014 The Musical.\u2019\u201d", "sentence_answer": "It can be read as an ode to Mr. Lloyd Webber\u2019s rock \u2019n\u2019 roll coming-of-age, containing snippets of the Rolling Stones\u2019 \u201c(I Can\u2019t Get No) Satisfaction\u201d (an inescapable radio hit from his adolescence); Deep Purple\u2019s \u201cSmoke on the Water\u201d (a nod to that band\u2019s lead singer, Ian Gillan , the original Jesus of \u201cSuperstar\u201d); and \u201cWalk on the Wild Side,\u201d by Lou Reed (whose music was ubiquitous on his early visits to New York)."} +{"question": "Whose music was ubiquitous on New York?", "paragraph": "It can be read as an ode to Mr. Lloyd Webber\u2019s rock \u2019n\u2019 roll coming-of-age, containing snippets of the Rolling Stones\u2019 \u201c(I Can\u2019t Get No) Satisfaction\u201d (an inescapable radio hit from his adolescence); Deep Purple\u2019s \u201cSmoke on the Water\u201d (a nod to that band\u2019s lead singer, Ian Gillan, the original Jesus of \u201cSuperstar\u201d); and \u201cWalk on the Wild Side,\u201d by Lou Reed (whose music was ubiquitous on his early visits to New York). Looking solely at the show\u2019s creative team, Mr. Slater acknowledged, \u201cCertainly, from a socio-economic standpoint, this is not the most obvious group to make \u2018School of Rock \u2014 The Musical.\u2019\u201d", "answer": "Lou Reed", "sentence": "It can be read as an ode to Mr. Lloyd Webber\u2019s rock \u2019n\u2019 roll coming-of-age, containing snippets of the Rolling Stones\u2019 \u201c(I Can\u2019t Get No) Satisfaction\u201d (an inescapable radio hit from his adolescence); Deep Purple\u2019s \u201cSmoke on the Water\u201d (a nod to that band\u2019s lead singer, Ian Gillan, the original Jesus of \u201cSuperstar\u201d); and \u201cWalk on the Wild Side,\u201d by Lou Reed (whose music was ubiquitous on his early visits to New York).", "paragraph_sentence": " It can be read as an ode to Mr. Lloyd Webber\u2019s rock \u2019n\u2019 roll coming-of-age, containing snippets of the Rolling Stones\u2019 \u201c(I Can\u2019t Get No) Satisfaction\u201d (an inescapable radio hit from his adolescence); Deep Purple\u2019s \u201cSmoke on the Water\u201d (a nod to that band\u2019s lead singer, Ian Gillan, the original Jesus of \u201cSuperstar\u201d); and \u201cWalk on the Wild Side,\u201d by Lou Reed (whose music was ubiquitous on his early visits to New York). Looking solely at the show\u2019s creative team, Mr. Slater acknowledged, \u201cCertainly, from a socio-economic standpoint, this is not the most obvious group to make \u2018School of Rock \u2014 The Musical.\u2019\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "It can be read as an ode to Mr. Lloyd Webber\u2019s rock \u2019n\u2019 roll coming-of-age, containing snippets of the Rolling Stones\u2019 \u201c(I Can\u2019t Get No) Satisfaction\u201d (an inescapable radio hit from his adolescence); Deep Purple\u2019s \u201cSmoke on the Water\u201d (a nod to that band\u2019s lead singer, Ian Gillan, the original Jesus of \u201cSuperstar\u201d); and \u201cWalk on the Wild Side,\u201d by Lou Reed (whose music was ubiquitous on his early visits to New York). Looking solely at the show\u2019s creative team, Mr. Slater acknowledged, \u201cCertainly, from a socio-economic standpoint, this is not the most obvious group to make \u2018School of Rock \u2014 The Musical.\u2019\u201d", "sentence_answer": "It can be read as an ode to Mr. Lloyd Webber\u2019s rock \u2019n\u2019 roll coming-of-age, containing snippets of the Rolling Stones\u2019 \u201c(I Can\u2019t Get No) Satisfaction\u201d (an inescapable radio hit from his adolescence); Deep Purple\u2019s \u201cSmoke on the Water\u201d (a nod to that band\u2019s lead singer, Ian Gillan, the original Jesus of \u201cSuperstar\u201d); and \u201cWalk on the Wild Side,\u201d by Lou Reed (whose music was ubiquitous on his early visits to New York)."} +{"question": "What type of show was School of Rock?", "paragraph": "It can be read as an ode to Mr. Lloyd Webber\u2019s rock \u2019n\u2019 roll coming-of-age, containing snippets of the Rolling Stones\u2019 \u201c(I Can\u2019t Get No) Satisfaction\u201d (an inescapable radio hit from his adolescence); Deep Purple\u2019s \u201cSmoke on the Water\u201d (a nod to that band\u2019s lead singer, Ian Gillan, the original Jesus of \u201cSuperstar\u201d); and \u201cWalk on the Wild Side,\u201d by Lou Reed (whose music was ubiquitous on his early visits to New York). Looking solely at the show\u2019s creative team, Mr. Slater acknowledged, \u201cCertainly, from a socio-economic standpoint, this is not the most obvious group to make \u2018School of Rock \u2014 The Musical.\u2019\u201d", "answer": "Musical", "sentence": "The Musical .", "paragraph_sentence": "It can be read as an ode to Mr. Lloyd Webber\u2019s rock \u2019n\u2019 roll coming-of-age, containing snippets of the Rolling Stones\u2019 \u201c(I Can\u2019t Get No) Satisfaction\u201d (an inescapable radio hit from his adolescence); Deep Purple\u2019s \u201cSmoke on the Water\u201d (a nod to that band\u2019s lead singer, Ian Gillan, the original Jesus of \u201cSuperstar\u201d); and \u201cWalk on the Wild Side,\u201d by Lou Reed (whose music was ubiquitous on his early visits to New York). Looking solely at the show\u2019s creative team, Mr. Slater acknowledged, \u201cCertainly, from a socio-economic standpoint, this is not the most obvious group to make \u2018School of Rock \u2014 The Musical . \u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "It can be read as an ode to Mr. Lloyd Webber\u2019s rock \u2019n\u2019 roll coming-of-age, containing snippets of the Rolling Stones\u2019 \u201c(I Can\u2019t Get No) Satisfaction\u201d (an inescapable radio hit from his adolescence); Deep Purple\u2019s \u201cSmoke on the Water\u201d (a nod to that band\u2019s lead singer, Ian Gillan, the original Jesus of \u201cSuperstar\u201d); and \u201cWalk on the Wild Side,\u201d by Lou Reed (whose music was ubiquitous on his early visits to New York). Looking solely at the show\u2019s creative team, Mr. Slater acknowledged, \u201cCertainly, from a socio-economic standpoint, this is not the most obvious group to make \u2018School of Rock \u2014 The Musical .\u2019\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The Musical ."} +{"question": "Who wanted to find his own voice?", "paragraph": "But thematically, Mr. Slater said, he could understand why Mr. Lloyd Webber might relate to the material. \u201cEveryone has gone through some period where they felt like they needed to break out of a category they had been put in and find their own voice,\u201d he said. \u201cThat\u2019s really what this show is about.\u201d The composition of the musical (in which Alex Brightman plays the Dewey Finn character) happened quickly, between June and December of 2014. Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater, a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan. Plans for a Broadway transfer were already in place \u2014 an unusually aggressive trajectory for a musical that never had an out-of-town tryout.", "answer": "Mr. Lloyd Webber", "sentence": "But thematically, Mr. Slater said, he could understand why Mr. Lloyd Webber might relate to the material.", "paragraph_sentence": " But thematically, Mr. Slater said, he could understand why Mr. Lloyd Webber might relate to the material. \u201cEveryone has gone through some period where they felt like they needed to break out of a category they had been put in and find their own voice,\u201d he said. \u201cThat\u2019s really what this show is about.\u201d The composition of the musical (in which Alex Brightman plays the Dewey Finn character) happened quickly, between June and December of 2014. Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater, a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan. Plans for a Broadway transfer were already in place \u2014 an unusually aggressive trajectory for a musical that never had an out-of-town tryout.", "paragraph_answer": "But thematically, Mr. Slater said, he could understand why Mr. Lloyd Webber might relate to the material. \u201cEveryone has gone through some period where they felt like they needed to break out of a category they had been put in and find their own voice,\u201d he said. \u201cThat\u2019s really what this show is about.\u201d The composition of the musical (in which Alex Brightman plays the Dewey Finn character) happened quickly, between June and December of 2014. Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater, a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan. Plans for a Broadway transfer were already in place \u2014 an unusually aggressive trajectory for a musical that never had an out-of-town tryout.", "sentence_answer": "But thematically, Mr. Slater said, he could understand why Mr. Lloyd Webber might relate to the material."} +{"question": "Who plays the Dewey Finn character in the musical?", "paragraph": "But thematically, Mr. Slater said, he could understand why Mr. Lloyd Webber might relate to the material. \u201cEveryone has gone through some period where they felt like they needed to break out of a category they had been put in and find their own voice,\u201d he said. \u201cThat\u2019s really what this show is about.\u201d The composition of the musical (in which Alex Brightman plays the Dewey Finn character) happened quickly, between June and December of 2014. Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater, a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan. Plans for a Broadway transfer were already in place \u2014 an unusually aggressive trajectory for a musical that never had an out-of-town tryout.", "answer": "Alex Brightman", "sentence": "The composition of the musical (in which Alex Brightman plays the Dewey Finn character) happened quickly, between June and December of 2014.", "paragraph_sentence": "But thematically, Mr. Slater said, he could understand why Mr. Lloyd Webber might relate to the material. \u201cEveryone has gone through some period where they felt like they needed to break out of a category they had been put in and find their own voice,\u201d he said. \u201cThat\u2019s really what this show is about.\u201d The composition of the musical (in which Alex Brightman plays the Dewey Finn character) happened quickly, between June and December of 2014. Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater, a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan. Plans for a Broadway transfer were already in place \u2014 an unusually aggressive trajectory for a musical that never had an out-of-town tryout.", "paragraph_answer": "But thematically, Mr. Slater said, he could understand why Mr. Lloyd Webber might relate to the material. \u201cEveryone has gone through some period where they felt like they needed to break out of a category they had been put in and find their own voice,\u201d he said. \u201cThat\u2019s really what this show is about.\u201d The composition of the musical (in which Alex Brightman plays the Dewey Finn character) happened quickly, between June and December of 2014. Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater, a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan. Plans for a Broadway transfer were already in place \u2014 an unusually aggressive trajectory for a musical that never had an out-of-town tryout.", "sentence_answer": "The composition of the musical (in which Alex Brightman plays the Dewey Finn character) happened quickly, between June and December of 2014."} +{"question": "when did the auditions for the musical were held?", "paragraph": "But thematically, Mr. Slater said, he could understand why Mr. Lloyd Webber might relate to the material. \u201cEveryone has gone through some period where they felt like they needed to break out of a category they had been put in and find their own voice,\u201d he said. \u201cThat\u2019s really what this show is about.\u201d The composition of the musical (in which Alex Brightman plays the Dewey Finn character) happened quickly, between June and December of 2014. Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater, a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan. Plans for a Broadway transfer were already in place \u2014 an unusually aggressive trajectory for a musical that never had an out-of-town tryout.", "answer": "at the start of this year,", "sentence": "Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater, a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan.", "paragraph_sentence": "But thematically, Mr. Slater said, he could understand why Mr. Lloyd Webber might relate to the material. \u201cEveryone has gone through some period where they felt like they needed to break out of a category they had been put in and find their own voice,\u201d he said. \u201cThat\u2019s really what this show is about.\u201d The composition of the musical (in which Alex Brightman plays the Dewey Finn character) happened quickly, between June and December of 2014. Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater, a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan. Plans for a Broadway transfer were already in place \u2014 an unusually aggressive trajectory for a musical that never had an out-of-town tryout.", "paragraph_answer": "But thematically, Mr. Slater said, he could understand why Mr. Lloyd Webber might relate to the material. \u201cEveryone has gone through some period where they felt like they needed to break out of a category they had been put in and find their own voice,\u201d he said. \u201cThat\u2019s really what this show is about.\u201d The composition of the musical (in which Alex Brightman plays the Dewey Finn character) happened quickly, between June and December of 2014. Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater, a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan. Plans for a Broadway transfer were already in place \u2014 an unusually aggressive trajectory for a musical that never had an out-of-town tryout.", "sentence_answer": "Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater, a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan."} +{"question": "Where were a series of test shows held at?", "paragraph": "But thematically, Mr. Slater said, he could understand why Mr. Lloyd Webber might relate to the material. \u201cEveryone has gone through some period where they felt like they needed to break out of a category they had been put in and find their own voice,\u201d he said. \u201cThat\u2019s really what this show is about.\u201d The composition of the musical (in which Alex Brightman plays the Dewey Finn character) happened quickly, between June and December of 2014. Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater, a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan. Plans for a Broadway transfer were already in place \u2014 an unusually aggressive trajectory for a musical that never had an out-of-town tryout.", "answer": "Gramercy Theater", "sentence": "Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater , a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan.", "paragraph_sentence": "But thematically, Mr. Slater said, he could understand why Mr. Lloyd Webber might relate to the material. \u201cEveryone has gone through some period where they felt like they needed to break out of a category they had been put in and find their own voice,\u201d he said. \u201cThat\u2019s really what this show is about.\u201d The composition of the musical (in which Alex Brightman plays the Dewey Finn character) happened quickly, between June and December of 2014. Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater , a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan. Plans for a Broadway transfer were already in place \u2014 an unusually aggressive trajectory for a musical that never had an out-of-town tryout.", "paragraph_answer": "But thematically, Mr. Slater said, he could understand why Mr. Lloyd Webber might relate to the material. \u201cEveryone has gone through some period where they felt like they needed to break out of a category they had been put in and find their own voice,\u201d he said. \u201cThat\u2019s really what this show is about.\u201d The composition of the musical (in which Alex Brightman plays the Dewey Finn character) happened quickly, between June and December of 2014. Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater , a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan. Plans for a Broadway transfer were already in place \u2014 an unusually aggressive trajectory for a musical that never had an out-of-town tryout.", "sentence_answer": "Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater , a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan."} +{"question": "Where is the Gramercy Theater located?", "paragraph": "But thematically, Mr. Slater said, he could understand why Mr. Lloyd Webber might relate to the material. \u201cEveryone has gone through some period where they felt like they needed to break out of a category they had been put in and find their own voice,\u201d he said. \u201cThat\u2019s really what this show is about.\u201d The composition of the musical (in which Alex Brightman plays the Dewey Finn character) happened quickly, between June and December of 2014. Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater, a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan. Plans for a Broadway transfer were already in place \u2014 an unusually aggressive trajectory for a musical that never had an out-of-town tryout.", "answer": "Midtown Manhattan", "sentence": "Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater, a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan .", "paragraph_sentence": "But thematically, Mr. Slater said, he could understand why Mr. Lloyd Webber might relate to the material. \u201cEveryone has gone through some period where they felt like they needed to break out of a category they had been put in and find their own voice,\u201d he said. \u201cThat\u2019s really what this show is about.\u201d The composition of the musical (in which Alex Brightman plays the Dewey Finn character) happened quickly, between June and December of 2014. Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater, a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan . Plans for a Broadway transfer were already in place \u2014 an unusually aggressive trajectory for a musical that never had an out-of-town tryout.", "paragraph_answer": "But thematically, Mr. Slater said, he could understand why Mr. Lloyd Webber might relate to the material. \u201cEveryone has gone through some period where they felt like they needed to break out of a category they had been put in and find their own voice,\u201d he said. \u201cThat\u2019s really what this show is about.\u201d The composition of the musical (in which Alex Brightman plays the Dewey Finn character) happened quickly, between June and December of 2014. Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater, a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan . Plans for a Broadway transfer were already in place \u2014 an unusually aggressive trajectory for a musical that never had an out-of-town tryout.", "sentence_answer": "Auditions for its school-aged characters were held at the start of this year, and over the summer, a series of test shows were held at the Gramercy Theater, a sticky-floored rock club in Midtown Manhattan ."} +{"question": "Who wrote Prudence?", "paragraph": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery. Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor. Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "answer": "\u00adDavid Treuer", "sentence": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer \u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression.", "paragraph_sentence": " The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer \u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery. Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor. Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "paragraph_answer": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer \u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery. Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor. Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "sentence_answer": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer \u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression."} +{"question": "Prudence unites what kind of a perspective with moral rigor?", "paragraph": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery. Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor. Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "answer": "sociopolitical", "sentence": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression.", "paragraph_sentence": " The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery. Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor. Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "paragraph_answer": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery. Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor. Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "sentence_answer": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression."} +{"question": "The author of Prudence believes that a lack of what is sad, deeply destructive, and irreversible?", "paragraph": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery. Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor. Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "answer": "bravery", "sentence": "On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery .", "paragraph_sentence": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery . Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor. Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "paragraph_answer": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery . Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor. Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "sentence_answer": "On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery ."} +{"question": "The author of Prudence believes that what type of personality trait can kill people?", "paragraph": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery. Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor. Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "answer": "Cowardice", "sentence": "Cowardice can kill people.", "paragraph_sentence": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery. Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor. Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "paragraph_answer": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery. Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor. Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "sentence_answer": " Cowardice can kill people."} +{"question": "What does the author value, that is an uncommon stance nowadays?", "paragraph": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery. Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor. Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "answer": "honor", "sentence": "This \u00adauthor values honor .", "paragraph_sentence": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery. Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor . Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "paragraph_answer": "The poetics of damage permeates \u00adDavid Treuer\u2019s elegantly bitter fourth novel, \u201cPrudence,\u201d which unites a distinctly modern sociopolitical perspective with a more old-fashioned moral rigor about the \u00adconsequences of emotional cowardice, complicity and repression. On the evidence here, Treuer believes in bravery. Moreover, he believes that a lack of bravery isn\u2019t just sad, it\u2019s deeply destructive \u2014 and the destruction can\u2019t be undone. Cowardice can kill people. While there\u2019s much hope in this lyrical novel, as evidenced by the freedom with which it examines some of the more transgressive interstices of race, sexual orientation and gender, there\u2019s also an obdurate insistence on taking responsibility, particularly if one is a man. Treuer\u2019s perspective is bracingly tough. This \u00adauthor values honor . Who dares to take that kind of stance anymore?", "sentence_answer": "This \u00adauthor values honor ."} +{"question": "Where is the venue Spectrum?", "paragraph": "This week night offers a couple of strong concert choices. On Sunday, you can head to Spectrum, a very cozy space on the Lower East Side, for Morton Feldman\u2019s late, visionary Piano and String Quartet, featuring the pianist Joseph Branciforte and string players drawn from several ensembles: Christopher Otto, Pauline Kim Harris, John Pickford Richards and Mariel Roberts. (9 p.m., 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.) And on Thursday there\u2019s the second installment in the Argento Chamber Ensemble\u2019s Mahler as New York Contemporary series, which this time pairs the chamber arrangement of \u201cDas Lied von der Erde\u201d with recent works by Oliver Schneller and Jesse Jones. (7:30 p.m., Park Avenue Armory, 643 Park Avenue, at 67th Street, 212-933-5812, argentomusic.com.)", "answer": "Lower East Side", "sentence": "On Sunday, you can head to Spectrum, a very cozy space on the Lower East Side , for Morton Feldman\u2019s late, visionary Piano and String Quartet, featuring the pianist Joseph Branciforte and string players drawn from several ensembles: Christopher Otto, Pauline Kim Harris, John Pickford Richards and Mariel Roberts.", "paragraph_sentence": "This week night offers a couple of strong concert choices. On Sunday, you can head to Spectrum, a very cozy space on the Lower East Side , for Morton Feldman\u2019s late, visionary Piano and String Quartet, featuring the pianist Joseph Branciforte and string players drawn from several ensembles: Christopher Otto, Pauline Kim Harris, John Pickford Richards and Mariel Roberts. (9 p.m., 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.) And on Thursday there\u2019s the second installment in the Argento Chamber Ensemble\u2019s Mahler as New York Contemporary series, which this time pairs the chamber arrangement of \u201cDas Lied von der Erde\u201d with recent works by Oliver Schneller and Jesse Jones. (7:30 p.m., Park Avenue Armory, 643 Park Avenue, at 67th Street, 212-933-5812, argentomusic.com.)", "paragraph_answer": "This week night offers a couple of strong concert choices. On Sunday, you can head to Spectrum, a very cozy space on the Lower East Side , for Morton Feldman\u2019s late, visionary Piano and String Quartet, featuring the pianist Joseph Branciforte and string players drawn from several ensembles: Christopher Otto, Pauline Kim Harris, John Pickford Richards and Mariel Roberts. (9 p.m., 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.) And on Thursday there\u2019s the second installment in the Argento Chamber Ensemble\u2019s Mahler as New York Contemporary series, which this time pairs the chamber arrangement of \u201cDas Lied von der Erde\u201d with recent works by Oliver Schneller and Jesse Jones. (7:30 p.m., Park Avenue Armory, 643 Park Avenue, at 67th Street, 212-933-5812, argentomusic.com.)", "sentence_answer": "On Sunday, you can head to Spectrum, a very cozy space on the Lower East Side , for Morton Feldman\u2019s late, visionary Piano and String Quartet, featuring the pianist Joseph Branciforte and string players drawn from several ensembles: Christopher Otto, Pauline Kim Harris, John Pickford Richards and Mariel Roberts."} +{"question": "Who is performing on Sunday?", "paragraph": "This week night offers a couple of strong concert choices. On Sunday, you can head to Spectrum, a very cozy space on the Lower East Side, for Morton Feldman\u2019s late, visionary Piano and String Quartet, featuring the pianist Joseph Branciforte and string players drawn from several ensembles: Christopher Otto, Pauline Kim Harris, John Pickford Richards and Mariel Roberts. (9 p.m., 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.) And on Thursday there\u2019s the second installment in the Argento Chamber Ensemble\u2019s Mahler as New York Contemporary series, which this time pairs the chamber arrangement of \u201cDas Lied von der Erde\u201d with recent works by Oliver Schneller and Jesse Jones. (7:30 p.m., Park Avenue Armory, 643 Park Avenue, at 67th Street, 212-933-5812, argentomusic.com.)", "answer": "Morton Feldman\u2019s late, visionary Piano and String Quartet,", "sentence": "On Sunday, you can head to Spectrum, a very cozy space on the Lower East Side, for Morton Feldman\u2019s late, visionary Piano and String Quartet, featuring the pianist Joseph Branciforte and string players drawn from several ensembles: Christopher Otto, Pauline Kim Harris, John Pickford Richards and Mariel Roberts.", "paragraph_sentence": "This week night offers a couple of strong concert choices. On Sunday, you can head to Spectrum, a very cozy space on the Lower East Side, for Morton Feldman\u2019s late, visionary Piano and String Quartet, featuring the pianist Joseph Branciforte and string players drawn from several ensembles: Christopher Otto, Pauline Kim Harris, John Pickford Richards and Mariel Roberts. (9 p.m., 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.) And on Thursday there\u2019s the second installment in the Argento Chamber Ensemble\u2019s Mahler as New York Contemporary series, which this time pairs the chamber arrangement of \u201cDas Lied von der Erde\u201d with recent works by Oliver Schneller and Jesse Jones. (7:30 p.m., Park Avenue Armory, 643 Park Avenue, at 67th Street, 212-933-5812, argentomusic.com.)", "paragraph_answer": "This week night offers a couple of strong concert choices. On Sunday, you can head to Spectrum, a very cozy space on the Lower East Side, for Morton Feldman\u2019s late, visionary Piano and String Quartet, featuring the pianist Joseph Branciforte and string players drawn from several ensembles: Christopher Otto, Pauline Kim Harris, John Pickford Richards and Mariel Roberts. (9 p.m., 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.) And on Thursday there\u2019s the second installment in the Argento Chamber Ensemble\u2019s Mahler as New York Contemporary series, which this time pairs the chamber arrangement of \u201cDas Lied von der Erde\u201d with recent works by Oliver Schneller and Jesse Jones. (7:30 p.m., Park Avenue Armory, 643 Park Avenue, at 67th Street, 212-933-5812, argentomusic.com.)", "sentence_answer": "On Sunday, you can head to Spectrum, a very cozy space on the Lower East Side, for Morton Feldman\u2019s late, visionary Piano and String Quartet, featuring the pianist Joseph Branciforte and string players drawn from several ensembles: Christopher Otto, Pauline Kim Harris, John Pickford Richards and Mariel Roberts."} +{"question": "What time is Morton Feldman's Piano and String Quartet performing at on Sunday?", "paragraph": "This week night offers a couple of strong concert choices. On Sunday, you can head to Spectrum, a very cozy space on the Lower East Side, for Morton Feldman\u2019s late, visionary Piano and String Quartet, featuring the pianist Joseph Branciforte and string players drawn from several ensembles: Christopher Otto, Pauline Kim Harris, John Pickford Richards and Mariel Roberts. (9 p.m., 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.) And on Thursday there\u2019s the second installment in the Argento Chamber Ensemble\u2019s Mahler as New York Contemporary series, which this time pairs the chamber arrangement of \u201cDas Lied von der Erde\u201d with recent works by Oliver Schneller and Jesse Jones. (7:30 p.m., Park Avenue Armory, 643 Park Avenue, at 67th Street, 212-933-5812, argentomusic.com.)", "answer": "9 p.m.", "sentence": "( 9 p.m. , 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.)", "paragraph_sentence": "This week night offers a couple of strong concert choices. On Sunday, you can head to Spectrum, a very cozy space on the Lower East Side, for Morton Feldman\u2019s late, visionary Piano and String Quartet, featuring the pianist Joseph Branciforte and string players drawn from several ensembles: Christopher Otto, Pauline Kim Harris, John Pickford Richards and Mariel Roberts. ( 9 p.m. , 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.) And on Thursday there\u2019s the second installment in the Argento Chamber Ensemble\u2019s Mahler as New York Contemporary series, which this time pairs the chamber arrangement of \u201cDas Lied von der Erde\u201d with recent works by Oliver Schneller and Jesse Jones. (7:30 p.m., Park Avenue Armory, 643 Park Avenue, at 67th Street, 212-933-5812, argentomusic.com.)", "paragraph_answer": "This week night offers a couple of strong concert choices. On Sunday, you can head to Spectrum, a very cozy space on the Lower East Side, for Morton Feldman\u2019s late, visionary Piano and String Quartet, featuring the pianist Joseph Branciforte and string players drawn from several ensembles: Christopher Otto, Pauline Kim Harris, John Pickford Richards and Mariel Roberts. ( 9 p.m. , 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.) And on Thursday there\u2019s the second installment in the Argento Chamber Ensemble\u2019s Mahler as New York Contemporary series, which this time pairs the chamber arrangement of \u201cDas Lied von der Erde\u201d with recent works by Oliver Schneller and Jesse Jones. (7:30 p.m., Park Avenue Armory, 643 Park Avenue, at 67th Street, 212-933-5812, argentomusic.com.)", "sentence_answer": "( 9 p.m. , 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.)"} +{"question": "What is the address of Spectrum?", "paragraph": "This week night offers a couple of strong concert choices. On Sunday, you can head to Spectrum, a very cozy space on the Lower East Side, for Morton Feldman\u2019s late, visionary Piano and String Quartet, featuring the pianist Joseph Branciforte and string players drawn from several ensembles: Christopher Otto, Pauline Kim Harris, John Pickford Richards and Mariel Roberts. (9 p.m., 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.) And on Thursday there\u2019s the second installment in the Argento Chamber Ensemble\u2019s Mahler as New York Contemporary series, which this time pairs the chamber arrangement of \u201cDas Lied von der Erde\u201d with recent works by Oliver Schneller and Jesse Jones. (7:30 p.m., Park Avenue Armory, 643 Park Avenue, at 67th Street, 212-933-5812, argentomusic.com.)", "answer": "121 Ludlow Street, second floor,", "sentence": "(9 p.m., 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.)", "paragraph_sentence": "This week night offers a couple of strong concert choices. On Sunday, you can head to Spectrum, a very cozy space on the Lower East Side, for Morton Feldman\u2019s late, visionary Piano and String Quartet, featuring the pianist Joseph Branciforte and string players drawn from several ensembles: Christopher Otto, Pauline Kim Harris, John Pickford Richards and Mariel Roberts. (9 p.m., 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.) And on Thursday there\u2019s the second installment in the Argento Chamber Ensemble\u2019s Mahler as New York Contemporary series, which this time pairs the chamber arrangement of \u201cDas Lied von der Erde\u201d with recent works by Oliver Schneller and Jesse Jones. (7:30 p.m., Park Avenue Armory, 643 Park Avenue, at 67th Street, 212-933-5812, argentomusic.com.)", "paragraph_answer": "This week night offers a couple of strong concert choices. On Sunday, you can head to Spectrum, a very cozy space on the Lower East Side, for Morton Feldman\u2019s late, visionary Piano and String Quartet, featuring the pianist Joseph Branciforte and string players drawn from several ensembles: Christopher Otto, Pauline Kim Harris, John Pickford Richards and Mariel Roberts. (9 p.m., 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.) And on Thursday there\u2019s the second installment in the Argento Chamber Ensemble\u2019s Mahler as New York Contemporary series, which this time pairs the chamber arrangement of \u201cDas Lied von der Erde\u201d with recent works by Oliver Schneller and Jesse Jones. (7:30 p.m., Park Avenue Armory, 643 Park Avenue, at 67th Street, 212-933-5812, argentomusic.com.)", "sentence_answer": "(9 p.m., 121 Ludlow Street, second floor, spectrumnyc.com.)"} +{"question": "What country has extradited persons for financial crimes?", "paragraph": "Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia, despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland. At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov, the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005. But after a long tussle between Washington and Moscow, which then also sought his extradition on embezzlement charges, Switzerland sent Mr. Adamov back to Russia to stand trial, rather than to the United States.", "answer": "Switzerland", "sentence": "Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia, despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland.", "paragraph_sentence": " Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia, despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland. At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov, the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005. But after a long tussle between Washington and Moscow, which then also sought his extradition on embezzlement charges, Switzerland sent Mr. Adamov back to Russia to stand trial, rather than to the United States.", "paragraph_answer": " Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia, despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland. At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov, the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005. But after a long tussle between Washington and Moscow, which then also sought his extradition on embezzlement charges, Switzerland sent Mr. Adamov back to Russia to stand trial, rather than to the United States.", "sentence_answer": " Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia, despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland."} +{"question": "For what reason did Switzerland extradite people?", "paragraph": "Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia, despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland. At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov, the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005. But after a long tussle between Washington and Moscow, which then also sought his extradition on embezzlement charges, Switzerland sent Mr. Adamov back to Russia to stand trial, rather than to the United States.", "answer": "financial fraud", "sentence": "Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia, despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland.", "paragraph_sentence": " Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia, despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland. At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov, the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005. But after a long tussle between Washington and Moscow, which then also sought his extradition on embezzlement charges, Switzerland sent Mr. Adamov back to Russia to stand trial, rather than to the United States.", "paragraph_answer": "Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia, despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland. At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov, the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005. But after a long tussle between Washington and Moscow, which then also sought his extradition on embezzlement charges, Switzerland sent Mr. Adamov back to Russia to stand trial, rather than to the United States.", "sentence_answer": "Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia, despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland."} +{"question": "Switzerland arrested who on behalf of the United States?", "paragraph": "Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia, despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland. At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov, the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005. But after a long tussle between Washington and Moscow, which then also sought his extradition on embezzlement charges, Switzerland sent Mr. Adamov back to Russia to stand trial, rather than to the United States.", "answer": "Yevgeny Adamov", "sentence": "At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov , the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005.", "paragraph_sentence": "Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia, despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland. At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov , the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005. But after a long tussle between Washington and Moscow, which then also sought his extradition on embezzlement charges, Switzerland sent Mr. Adamov back to Russia to stand trial, rather than to the United States.", "paragraph_answer": "Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia, despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland. At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov , the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005. But after a long tussle between Washington and Moscow, which then also sought his extradition on embezzlement charges, Switzerland sent Mr. Adamov back to Russia to stand trial, rather than to the United States.", "sentence_answer": "At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov , the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005."} +{"question": "What is the name of the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry?", "paragraph": "Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia, despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland. At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov, the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005. But after a long tussle between Washington and Moscow, which then also sought his extradition on embezzlement charges, Switzerland sent Mr. Adamov back to Russia to stand trial, rather than to the United States.", "answer": "Yevgeny Adamov", "sentence": "At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov , the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005.", "paragraph_sentence": "Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia, despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland. At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov , the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005. But after a long tussle between Washington and Moscow, which then also sought his extradition on embezzlement charges, Switzerland sent Mr. Adamov back to Russia to stand trial, rather than to the United States.", "paragraph_answer": "Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia, despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland. At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov , the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005. But after a long tussle between Washington and Moscow, which then also sought his extradition on embezzlement charges, Switzerland sent Mr. Adamov back to Russia to stand trial, rather than to the United States.", "sentence_answer": "At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov , the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005."} +{"question": "To what country was Yevgeny Adamov sent to stand trial?", "paragraph": "Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia, despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland. At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov, the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005. But after a long tussle between Washington and Moscow, which then also sought his extradition on embezzlement charges, Switzerland sent Mr. Adamov back to Russia to stand trial, rather than to the United States.", "answer": "Russia", "sentence": "Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia , despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland.", "paragraph_sentence": " Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia , despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland. At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov, the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005. But after a long tussle between Washington and Moscow, which then also sought his extradition on embezzlement charges, Switzerland sent Mr. Adamov back to Russia to stand trial, rather than to the United States.", "paragraph_answer": "Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia , despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland. At the request of the United States, Switzerland arrested Yevgeny Adamov, the former head of the Russian atomic energy ministry, in 2005. But after a long tussle between Washington and Moscow, which then also sought his extradition on embezzlement charges, Switzerland sent Mr. Adamov back to Russia to stand trial, rather than to the United States.", "sentence_answer": "Switzerland has extradited some people wanted for financial fraud by countries like Russia , despite criticism from human rights groups concerned that they would not receive a fair trial in their homeland."} +{"question": "Who was known for their ruthlessness in politics?", "paragraph": "Others, however, do see a problem. Mr. Medvedchuk, who was the longtime chief of staff to former President Leonid D. Kuchma, is a polarizing figure in Ukraine, known for his ruthlessness in politics and for his checkered past as a young lawyer in the Soviet Union. His role in a Soviet crackdown on dissidents ahead of the 1980 Olympics is widely believed to have contributed to the death of a Ukrainian poet and human rights activist, Vasyl Stus. Mr. Stus, exercising one of his few rights as a dissident defendant, tried to refuse representation by Mr. Medvedchuk, his state-appointed lawyer. Mr. Medvedchuk, however, insisted on speaking at the trial anyway, declaring his client guilty and saying he deserved to be punished. Five years later, Mr. Stus, who had been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature, died at the age of 47 in a forced labor camp in Russia.", "answer": "Leonid D. Kuchma", "sentence": "Mr. Medvedchuk, who was the longtime chief of staff to former President Leonid D. Kuchma , is a polarizing figure in Ukraine, known for his ruthlessness in politics and for his checkered past as a young lawyer in the Soviet Union.", "paragraph_sentence": "Others, however, do see a problem. Mr. Medvedchuk, who was the longtime chief of staff to former President Leonid D. Kuchma , is a polarizing figure in Ukraine, known for his ruthlessness in politics and for his checkered past as a young lawyer in the Soviet Union. His role in a Soviet crackdown on dissidents ahead of the 1980 Olympics is widely believed to have contributed to the death of a Ukrainian poet and human rights activist, Vasyl Stus. Mr. Stus, exercising one of his few rights as a dissident defendant, tried to refuse representation by Mr. Medvedchuk, his state-appointed lawyer. Mr. Medvedchuk, however, insisted on speaking at the trial anyway, declaring his client guilty and saying he deserved to be punished. Five years later, Mr. Stus, who had been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature, died at the age of 47 in a forced labor camp in Russia.", "paragraph_answer": "Others, however, do see a problem. Mr. Medvedchuk, who was the longtime chief of staff to former President Leonid D. Kuchma , is a polarizing figure in Ukraine, known for his ruthlessness in politics and for his checkered past as a young lawyer in the Soviet Union. His role in a Soviet crackdown on dissidents ahead of the 1980 Olympics is widely believed to have contributed to the death of a Ukrainian poet and human rights activist, Vasyl Stus. Mr. Stus, exercising one of his few rights as a dissident defendant, tried to refuse representation by Mr. Medvedchuk, his state-appointed lawyer. Mr. Medvedchuk, however, insisted on speaking at the trial anyway, declaring his client guilty and saying he deserved to be punished. Five years later, Mr. Stus, who had been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature, died at the age of 47 in a forced labor camp in Russia.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Medvedchuk, who was the longtime chief of staff to former President Leonid D. Kuchma , is a polarizing figure in Ukraine, known for his ruthlessness in politics and for his checkered past as a young lawyer in the Soviet Union."} +{"question": "Who did Mr. Medvedchuk state was guilty?", "paragraph": "Others, however, do see a problem. Mr. Medvedchuk, who was the longtime chief of staff to former President Leonid D. Kuchma, is a polarizing figure in Ukraine, known for his ruthlessness in politics and for his checkered past as a young lawyer in the Soviet Union. His role in a Soviet crackdown on dissidents ahead of the 1980 Olympics is widely believed to have contributed to the death of a Ukrainian poet and human rights activist, Vasyl Stus. Mr. Stus, exercising one of his few rights as a dissident defendant, tried to refuse representation by Mr. Medvedchuk, his state-appointed lawyer. Mr. Medvedchuk, however, insisted on speaking at the trial anyway, declaring his client guilty and saying he deserved to be punished. Five years later, Mr. Stus, who had been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature, died at the age of 47 in a forced labor camp in Russia.", "answer": "Vasyl Stus", "sentence": "His role in a Soviet crackdown on dissidents ahead of the 1980 Olympics is widely believed to have contributed to the death of a Ukrainian poet and human rights activist, Vasyl Stus .", "paragraph_sentence": "Others, however, do see a problem. Mr. Medvedchuk, who was the longtime chief of staff to former President Leonid D. Kuchma, is a polarizing figure in Ukraine, known for his ruthlessness in politics and for his checkered past as a young lawyer in the Soviet Union. His role in a Soviet crackdown on dissidents ahead of the 1980 Olympics is widely believed to have contributed to the death of a Ukrainian poet and human rights activist, Vasyl Stus . Mr. Stus, exercising one of his few rights as a dissident defendant, tried to refuse representation by Mr. Medvedchuk, his state-appointed lawyer. Mr. Medvedchuk, however, insisted on speaking at the trial anyway, declaring his client guilty and saying he deserved to be punished. Five years later, Mr. Stus, who had been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature, died at the age of 47 in a forced labor camp in Russia.", "paragraph_answer": "Others, however, do see a problem. Mr. Medvedchuk, who was the longtime chief of staff to former President Leonid D. Kuchma, is a polarizing figure in Ukraine, known for his ruthlessness in politics and for his checkered past as a young lawyer in the Soviet Union. His role in a Soviet crackdown on dissidents ahead of the 1980 Olympics is widely believed to have contributed to the death of a Ukrainian poet and human rights activist, Vasyl Stus . Mr. Stus, exercising one of his few rights as a dissident defendant, tried to refuse representation by Mr. Medvedchuk, his state-appointed lawyer. Mr. Medvedchuk, however, insisted on speaking at the trial anyway, declaring his client guilty and saying he deserved to be punished. Five years later, Mr. Stus, who had been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature, died at the age of 47 in a forced labor camp in Russia.", "sentence_answer": "His role in a Soviet crackdown on dissidents ahead of the 1980 Olympics is widely believed to have contributed to the death of a Ukrainian poet and human rights activist, Vasyl Stus ."} +{"question": "Who was a poet from Ukrain?", "paragraph": "Others, however, do see a problem. Mr. Medvedchuk, who was the longtime chief of staff to former President Leonid D. Kuchma, is a polarizing figure in Ukraine, known for his ruthlessness in politics and for his checkered past as a young lawyer in the Soviet Union. His role in a Soviet crackdown on dissidents ahead of the 1980 Olympics is widely believed to have contributed to the death of a Ukrainian poet and human rights activist, Vasyl Stus. Mr. Stus, exercising one of his few rights as a dissident defendant, tried to refuse representation by Mr. Medvedchuk, his state-appointed lawyer. Mr. Medvedchuk, however, insisted on speaking at the trial anyway, declaring his client guilty and saying he deserved to be punished. Five years later, Mr. Stus, who had been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature, died at the age of 47 in a forced labor camp in Russia.", "answer": "Vasyl Stus", "sentence": "His role in a Soviet crackdown on dissidents ahead of the 1980 Olympics is widely believed to have contributed to the death of a Ukrainian poet and human rights activist, Vasyl Stus .", "paragraph_sentence": "Others, however, do see a problem. Mr. Medvedchuk, who was the longtime chief of staff to former President Leonid D. Kuchma, is a polarizing figure in Ukraine, known for his ruthlessness in politics and for his checkered past as a young lawyer in the Soviet Union. His role in a Soviet crackdown on dissidents ahead of the 1980 Olympics is widely believed to have contributed to the death of a Ukrainian poet and human rights activist, Vasyl Stus . Mr. Stus, exercising one of his few rights as a dissident defendant, tried to refuse representation by Mr. Medvedchuk, his state-appointed lawyer. Mr. Medvedchuk, however, insisted on speaking at the trial anyway, declaring his client guilty and saying he deserved to be punished. Five years later, Mr. Stus, who had been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature, died at the age of 47 in a forced labor camp in Russia.", "paragraph_answer": "Others, however, do see a problem. Mr. Medvedchuk, who was the longtime chief of staff to former President Leonid D. Kuchma, is a polarizing figure in Ukraine, known for his ruthlessness in politics and for his checkered past as a young lawyer in the Soviet Union. His role in a Soviet crackdown on dissidents ahead of the 1980 Olympics is widely believed to have contributed to the death of a Ukrainian poet and human rights activist, Vasyl Stus . Mr. Stus, exercising one of his few rights as a dissident defendant, tried to refuse representation by Mr. Medvedchuk, his state-appointed lawyer. Mr. Medvedchuk, however, insisted on speaking at the trial anyway, declaring his client guilty and saying he deserved to be punished. Five years later, Mr. Stus, who had been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature, died at the age of 47 in a forced labor camp in Russia.", "sentence_answer": "His role in a Soviet crackdown on dissidents ahead of the 1980 Olympics is widely believed to have contributed to the death of a Ukrainian poet and human rights activist, Vasyl Stus ."} +{"question": "What role did Mr. Medvedchuk have for President Leonid D Kuchma?", "paragraph": "Others, however, do see a problem. Mr. Medvedchuk, who was the longtime chief of staff to former President Leonid D. Kuchma, is a polarizing figure in Ukraine, known for his ruthlessness in politics and for his checkered past as a young lawyer in the Soviet Union. His role in a Soviet crackdown on dissidents ahead of the 1980 Olympics is widely believed to have contributed to the death of a Ukrainian poet and human rights activist, Vasyl Stus. Mr. Stus, exercising one of his few rights as a dissident defendant, tried to refuse representation by Mr. Medvedchuk, his state-appointed lawyer. Mr. Medvedchuk, however, insisted on speaking at the trial anyway, declaring his client guilty and saying he deserved to be punished. Five years later, Mr. Stus, who had been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature, died at the age of 47 in a forced labor camp in Russia.", "answer": "chief of staff", "sentence": "Mr. Medvedchuk, who was the longtime chief of staff to former President Leonid D. Kuchma, is a polarizing figure in Ukraine, known for his ruthlessness in politics and for his checkered past as a young lawyer in the Soviet Union.", "paragraph_sentence": "Others, however, do see a problem. Mr. Medvedchuk, who was the longtime chief of staff to former President Leonid D. Kuchma, is a polarizing figure in Ukraine, known for his ruthlessness in politics and for his checkered past as a young lawyer in the Soviet Union. His role in a Soviet crackdown on dissidents ahead of the 1980 Olympics is widely believed to have contributed to the death of a Ukrainian poet and human rights activist, Vasyl Stus. Mr. Stus, exercising one of his few rights as a dissident defendant, tried to refuse representation by Mr. Medvedchuk, his state-appointed lawyer. Mr. Medvedchuk, however, insisted on speaking at the trial anyway, declaring his client guilty and saying he deserved to be punished. Five years later, Mr. Stus, who had been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature, died at the age of 47 in a forced labor camp in Russia.", "paragraph_answer": "Others, however, do see a problem. Mr. Medvedchuk, who was the longtime chief of staff to former President Leonid D. Kuchma, is a polarizing figure in Ukraine, known for his ruthlessness in politics and for his checkered past as a young lawyer in the Soviet Union. His role in a Soviet crackdown on dissidents ahead of the 1980 Olympics is widely believed to have contributed to the death of a Ukrainian poet and human rights activist, Vasyl Stus. Mr. Stus, exercising one of his few rights as a dissident defendant, tried to refuse representation by Mr. Medvedchuk, his state-appointed lawyer. Mr. Medvedchuk, however, insisted on speaking at the trial anyway, declaring his client guilty and saying he deserved to be punished. Five years later, Mr. Stus, who had been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature, died at the age of 47 in a forced labor camp in Russia.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Medvedchuk, who was the longtime chief of staff to former President Leonid D. Kuchma, is a polarizing figure in Ukraine, known for his ruthlessness in politics and for his checkered past as a young lawyer in the Soviet Union."} +{"question": "What was Mr. Stus nominated for?", "paragraph": "Others, however, do see a problem. Mr. Medvedchuk, who was the longtime chief of staff to former President Leonid D. Kuchma, is a polarizing figure in Ukraine, known for his ruthlessness in politics and for his checkered past as a young lawyer in the Soviet Union. His role in a Soviet crackdown on dissidents ahead of the 1980 Olympics is widely believed to have contributed to the death of a Ukrainian poet and human rights activist, Vasyl Stus. Mr. Stus, exercising one of his few rights as a dissident defendant, tried to refuse representation by Mr. Medvedchuk, his state-appointed lawyer. Mr. Medvedchuk, however, insisted on speaking at the trial anyway, declaring his client guilty and saying he deserved to be punished. Five years later, Mr. Stus, who had been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature, died at the age of 47 in a forced labor camp in Russia.", "answer": "Nobel Prize in Literature", "sentence": "Five years later, Mr. Stus, who had been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature , died at the age of 47 in a forced labor camp in Russia.", "paragraph_sentence": "Others, however, do see a problem. Mr. Medvedchuk, who was the longtime chief of staff to former President Leonid D. Kuchma, is a polarizing figure in Ukraine, known for his ruthlessness in politics and for his checkered past as a young lawyer in the Soviet Union. His role in a Soviet crackdown on dissidents ahead of the 1980 Olympics is widely believed to have contributed to the death of a Ukrainian poet and human rights activist, Vasyl Stus. Mr. Stus, exercising one of his few rights as a dissident defendant, tried to refuse representation by Mr. Medvedchuk, his state-appointed lawyer. Mr. Medvedchuk, however, insisted on speaking at the trial anyway, declaring his client guilty and saying he deserved to be punished. Five years later, Mr. Stus, who had been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature , died at the age of 47 in a forced labor camp in Russia. ", "paragraph_answer": "Others, however, do see a problem. Mr. Medvedchuk, who was the longtime chief of staff to former President Leonid D. Kuchma, is a polarizing figure in Ukraine, known for his ruthlessness in politics and for his checkered past as a young lawyer in the Soviet Union. His role in a Soviet crackdown on dissidents ahead of the 1980 Olympics is widely believed to have contributed to the death of a Ukrainian poet and human rights activist, Vasyl Stus. Mr. Stus, exercising one of his few rights as a dissident defendant, tried to refuse representation by Mr. Medvedchuk, his state-appointed lawyer. Mr. Medvedchuk, however, insisted on speaking at the trial anyway, declaring his client guilty and saying he deserved to be punished. Five years later, Mr. Stus, who had been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature , died at the age of 47 in a forced labor camp in Russia.", "sentence_answer": "Five years later, Mr. Stus, who had been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature , died at the age of 47 in a forced labor camp in Russia."} +{"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."} +{"question": "How old was Mr. Sverstiuk when he died?", "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": "86", "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 ."} +{"question": "What is an evil name?", "paragraph": "\u201cHe acted more like a prosecutor than a defense lawyer,\u201d Yevhen Sverstiuk, an essayist and author who knew Mr. Stus, said in an interview last year. Mr. Sverstiuk, who himself spent seven years as a political prisoner in Soviet labor camps and five years in exile in Siberia, died in December at 86. He had recently served as president of the Ukrainian PEN Center, a chapter of the international writers\u2019 association. \u201cA man with such a past cannot be a public figure,\u201d Mr. Sverstiuk said of Mr. Medvedchuk in the interview, adding: \u201cIn short, he is a sinister character. This is an evil name.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Medvedchuk", "sentence": "\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.", "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": "\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."} +{"question": "Who acted like a prosecutor?", "paragraph": "\u201cHe acted more like a prosecutor than a defense lawyer,\u201d Yevhen Sverstiuk, an essayist and author who knew Mr. Stus, said in an interview last year. Mr. Sverstiuk, who himself spent seven years as a political prisoner in Soviet labor camps and five years in exile in Siberia, died in December at 86. He had recently served as president of the Ukrainian PEN Center, a chapter of the international writers\u2019 association. \u201cA man with such a past cannot be a public figure,\u201d Mr. Sverstiuk said of Mr. Medvedchuk in the interview, adding: \u201cIn short, he is a sinister character. This is an evil name.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Stus", "sentence": "\u201cHe acted more like a prosecutor than a defense lawyer,\u201d Yevhen Sverstiuk, an essayist and author who knew Mr. Stus , said in an interview last year.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cHe acted more like a prosecutor than a defense lawyer,\u201d Yevhen Sverstiuk, an essayist and author who knew Mr. Stus , said in an interview last year. Mr. Sverstiuk, who himself spent seven years as a political prisoner in Soviet labor camps and five years in exile in Siberia, died in December at 86. He had recently served as president of the Ukrainian PEN Center, a chapter of the international writers\u2019 association. \u201cA man with such a past cannot be a public figure,\u201d Mr. Sverstiuk said of Mr. Medvedchuk in the interview, adding: \u201cIn short, he is a sinister character. This is an evil name.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cHe acted more like a prosecutor than a defense lawyer,\u201d Yevhen Sverstiuk, an essayist and author who knew Mr. Stus , said in an interview last year. Mr. Sverstiuk, who himself spent seven years as a political prisoner in Soviet labor camps and five years in exile in Siberia, died in December at 86. He had recently served as president of the Ukrainian PEN Center, a chapter of the international writers\u2019 association. \u201cA man with such a past cannot be a public figure,\u201d Mr. Sverstiuk said of Mr. Medvedchuk in the interview, adding: \u201cIn short, he is a sinister character. This is an evil name.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cHe acted more like a prosecutor than a defense lawyer,\u201d Yevhen Sverstiuk, an essayist and author who knew Mr. Stus , said in an interview last year."} +{"question": "What is the Ukrainian PEN Center?", "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": "a chapter of the international writers\u2019 association", "sentence": "He had recently served as president of the Ukrainian PEN Center, a chapter of the international writers\u2019 association .", "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": "He had recently served as president of the Ukrainian PEN Center, a chapter of the international writers\u2019 association ."} +{"question": "What was the main idea of Mr. Putin's speech?", "paragraph": "In July 2013, Mr. Putin sat next to Mr. Medvedchuk at an event the group held in Kiev and gave a speech about the deep historical ties between Russia and Ukraine, including \u201cthe common spiritual values that make us a single people.\u201d Throughout that fall, Ukrainian Choice ran an aggressive anti-gay ad campaign warning against decayed values in the West. In a precursor to Russia\u2019s now frequent charges of fascism against Kiev and the West, Mr. Medvedchuk described the European Union as the modern heir to Germany\u2019s Third Reich. A co-founder of a major law firm in Kiev, he was not always so virulently anti-Western, according to analysts who have followed his career. As a member of Parliament from 1997 to 2002, he was known to express pro-European views, and had strong working relationships with officials in Poland. Yet, he became so powerful and influential as Mr. Kuchma\u2019s chief of staff, from 2002 to 2005, that there was a joke in Kiev political circles: Mr. Kuchma was serving as president in the Medvedchuk administration. Some Ukrainian analysts believe there is more than a grain of truth in the gag, and that Mr. Putin\u2019s goal is to create a Medvedchuk administration, if not in Kiev, then in Donetsk, where the Kremlin has made clear it would like to see the region granted autonomy similar to that of Chechnya in Russia. In May, with the crisis in eastern Ukraine deepening, Mr. Putin publicly urged that Mr. Medvedchuk be given an important role as a peace negotiator. As soon as Mr. Medvedchuk got involved, the Kremlin issued a statement expressing Mr. Putin\u2019s praise.", "answer": "historical ties between Russia and Ukraine", "sentence": "In July 2013, Mr. Putin sat next to Mr. Medvedchuk at an event the group held in Kiev and gave a speech about the deep historical ties between Russia and Ukraine , including \u201cthe common spiritual values that make us a single people.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " In July 2013, Mr. Putin sat next to Mr. Medvedchuk at an event the group held in Kiev and gave a speech about the deep historical ties between Russia and Ukraine , including \u201cthe common spiritual values that make us a single people.\u201d Throughout that fall, Ukrainian Choice ran an aggressive anti-gay ad campaign warning against decayed values in the West. In a precursor to Russia\u2019s now frequent charges of fascism against Kiev and the West, Mr. Medvedchuk described the European Union as the modern heir to Germany\u2019s Third Reich. A co-founder of a major law firm in Kiev, he was not always so virulently anti-Western, according to analysts who have followed his career. As a member of Parliament from 1997 to 2002, he was known to express pro-European views, and had strong working relationships with officials in Poland. Yet, he became so powerful and influential as Mr. Kuchma\u2019s chief of staff, from 2002 to 2005, that there was a joke in Kiev political circles: Mr. Kuchma was serving as president in the Medvedchuk administration. Some Ukrainian analysts believe there is more than a grain of truth in the gag, and that Mr. Putin\u2019s goal is to create a Medvedchuk administration, if not in Kiev, then in Donetsk, where the Kremlin has made clear it would like to see the region granted autonomy similar to that of Chechnya in Russia. In May, with the crisis in eastern Ukraine deepening, Mr. Putin publicly urged that Mr. Medvedchuk be given an important role as a peace negotiator. As soon as Mr. Medvedchuk got involved, the Kremlin issued a statement expressing Mr. Putin\u2019s praise.", "paragraph_answer": "In July 2013, Mr. Putin sat next to Mr. Medvedchuk at an event the group held in Kiev and gave a speech about the deep historical ties between Russia and Ukraine , including \u201cthe common spiritual values that make us a single people.\u201d Throughout that fall, Ukrainian Choice ran an aggressive anti-gay ad campaign warning against decayed values in the West. In a precursor to Russia\u2019s now frequent charges of fascism against Kiev and the West, Mr. Medvedchuk described the European Union as the modern heir to Germany\u2019s Third Reich. A co-founder of a major law firm in Kiev, he was not always so virulently anti-Western, according to analysts who have followed his career. As a member of Parliament from 1997 to 2002, he was known to express pro-European views, and had strong working relationships with officials in Poland. Yet, he became so powerful and influential as Mr. Kuchma\u2019s chief of staff, from 2002 to 2005, that there was a joke in Kiev political circles: Mr. Kuchma was serving as president in the Medvedchuk administration. Some Ukrainian analysts believe there is more than a grain of truth in the gag, and that Mr. Putin\u2019s goal is to create a Medvedchuk administration, if not in Kiev, then in Donetsk, where the Kremlin has made clear it would like to see the region granted autonomy similar to that of Chechnya in Russia. In May, with the crisis in eastern Ukraine deepening, Mr. Putin publicly urged that Mr. Medvedchuk be given an important role as a peace negotiator. As soon as Mr. Medvedchuk got involved, the Kremlin issued a statement expressing Mr. Putin\u2019s praise.", "sentence_answer": "In July 2013, Mr. Putin sat next to Mr. Medvedchuk at an event the group held in Kiev and gave a speech about the deep historical ties between Russia and Ukraine , including \u201cthe common spiritual values that make us a single people.\u201d"} +{"question": "What was the Ukrainian Choice ad about?", "paragraph": "In July 2013, Mr. Putin sat next to Mr. Medvedchuk at an event the group held in Kiev and gave a speech about the deep historical ties between Russia and Ukraine, including \u201cthe common spiritual values that make us a single people.\u201d Throughout that fall, Ukrainian Choice ran an aggressive anti-gay ad campaign warning against decayed values in the West. In a precursor to Russia\u2019s now frequent charges of fascism against Kiev and the West, Mr. Medvedchuk described the European Union as the modern heir to Germany\u2019s Third Reich. A co-founder of a major law firm in Kiev, he was not always so virulently anti-Western, according to analysts who have followed his career. As a member of Parliament from 1997 to 2002, he was known to express pro-European views, and had strong working relationships with officials in Poland. Yet, he became so powerful and influential as Mr. Kuchma\u2019s chief of staff, from 2002 to 2005, that there was a joke in Kiev political circles: Mr. Kuchma was serving as president in the Medvedchuk administration. Some Ukrainian analysts believe there is more than a grain of truth in the gag, and that Mr. Putin\u2019s goal is to create a Medvedchuk administration, if not in Kiev, then in Donetsk, where the Kremlin has made clear it would like to see the region granted autonomy similar to that of Chechnya in Russia. In May, with the crisis in eastern Ukraine deepening, Mr. Putin publicly urged that Mr. Medvedchuk be given an important role as a peace negotiator. As soon as Mr. Medvedchuk got involved, the Kremlin issued a statement expressing Mr. Putin\u2019s praise.", "answer": "warning against decayed values in the West", "sentence": "Throughout that fall, Ukrainian Choice ran an aggressive anti-gay ad campaign warning against decayed values in the West .", "paragraph_sentence": "In July 2013, Mr. Putin sat next to Mr. Medvedchuk at an event the group held in Kiev and gave a speech about the deep historical ties between Russia and Ukraine, including \u201cthe common spiritual values that make us a single people.\u201d Throughout that fall, Ukrainian Choice ran an aggressive anti-gay ad campaign warning against decayed values in the West . In a precursor to Russia\u2019s now frequent charges of fascism against Kiev and the West, Mr. Medvedchuk described the European Union as the modern heir to Germany\u2019s Third Reich. A co-founder of a major law firm in Kiev, he was not always so virulently anti-Western, according to analysts who have followed his career. As a member of Parliament from 1997 to 2002, he was known to express pro-European views, and had strong working relationships with officials in Poland. Yet, he became so powerful and influential as Mr. Kuchma\u2019s chief of staff, from 2002 to 2005, that there was a joke in Kiev political circles: Mr. Kuchma was serving as president in the Medvedchuk administration. Some Ukrainian analysts believe there is more than a grain of truth in the gag, and that Mr. Putin\u2019s goal is to create a Medvedchuk administration, if not in Kiev, then in Donetsk, where the Kremlin has made clear it would like to see the region granted autonomy similar to that of Chechnya in Russia. In May, with the crisis in eastern Ukraine deepening, Mr. Putin publicly urged that Mr. Medvedchuk be given an important role as a peace negotiator. As soon as Mr. Medvedchuk got involved, the Kremlin issued a statement expressing Mr. Putin\u2019s praise.", "paragraph_answer": "In July 2013, Mr. Putin sat next to Mr. Medvedchuk at an event the group held in Kiev and gave a speech about the deep historical ties between Russia and Ukraine, including \u201cthe common spiritual values that make us a single people.\u201d Throughout that fall, Ukrainian Choice ran an aggressive anti-gay ad campaign warning against decayed values in the West . In a precursor to Russia\u2019s now frequent charges of fascism against Kiev and the West, Mr. Medvedchuk described the European Union as the modern heir to Germany\u2019s Third Reich. A co-founder of a major law firm in Kiev, he was not always so virulently anti-Western, according to analysts who have followed his career. As a member of Parliament from 1997 to 2002, he was known to express pro-European views, and had strong working relationships with officials in Poland. Yet, he became so powerful and influential as Mr. Kuchma\u2019s chief of staff, from 2002 to 2005, that there was a joke in Kiev political circles: Mr. Kuchma was serving as president in the Medvedchuk administration. Some Ukrainian analysts believe there is more than a grain of truth in the gag, and that Mr. Putin\u2019s goal is to create a Medvedchuk administration, if not in Kiev, then in Donetsk, where the Kremlin has made clear it would like to see the region granted autonomy similar to that of Chechnya in Russia. In May, with the crisis in eastern Ukraine deepening, Mr. Putin publicly urged that Mr. Medvedchuk be given an important role as a peace negotiator. As soon as Mr. Medvedchuk got involved, the Kremlin issued a statement expressing Mr. Putin\u2019s praise.", "sentence_answer": "Throughout that fall, Ukrainian Choice ran an aggressive anti-gay ad campaign warning against decayed values in the West ."} +{"question": "Who described the EU as the modern heir to Germany's Third Reich?", "paragraph": "In July 2013, Mr. Putin sat next to Mr. Medvedchuk at an event the group held in Kiev and gave a speech about the deep historical ties between Russia and Ukraine, including \u201cthe common spiritual values that make us a single people.\u201d Throughout that fall, Ukrainian Choice ran an aggressive anti-gay ad campaign warning against decayed values in the West. In a precursor to Russia\u2019s now frequent charges of fascism against Kiev and the West, Mr. Medvedchuk described the European Union as the modern heir to Germany\u2019s Third Reich. A co-founder of a major law firm in Kiev, he was not always so virulently anti-Western, according to analysts who have followed his career. As a member of Parliament from 1997 to 2002, he was known to express pro-European views, and had strong working relationships with officials in Poland. Yet, he became so powerful and influential as Mr. Kuchma\u2019s chief of staff, from 2002 to 2005, that there was a joke in Kiev political circles: Mr. Kuchma was serving as president in the Medvedchuk administration. Some Ukrainian analysts believe there is more than a grain of truth in the gag, and that Mr. Putin\u2019s goal is to create a Medvedchuk administration, if not in Kiev, then in Donetsk, where the Kremlin has made clear it would like to see the region granted autonomy similar to that of Chechnya in Russia. In May, with the crisis in eastern Ukraine deepening, Mr. Putin publicly urged that Mr. Medvedchuk be given an important role as a peace negotiator. As soon as Mr. Medvedchuk got involved, the Kremlin issued a statement expressing Mr. Putin\u2019s praise.", "answer": "Mr. Medvedchuk", "sentence": "In July 2013, Mr. Putin sat next to Mr. Medvedchuk at an event the group held in Kiev and gave a speech about the deep historical ties between Russia and Ukraine, including \u201cthe common spiritual values that make us a single people.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " In July 2013, Mr. Putin sat next to Mr. Medvedchuk at an event the group held in Kiev and gave a speech about the deep historical ties between Russia and Ukraine, including \u201cthe common spiritual values that make us a single people.\u201d Throughout that fall, Ukrainian Choice ran an aggressive anti-gay ad campaign warning against decayed values in the West. In a precursor to Russia\u2019s now frequent charges of fascism against Kiev and the West, Mr. Medvedchuk described the European Union as the modern heir to Germany\u2019s Third Reich. A co-founder of a major law firm in Kiev, he was not always so virulently anti-Western, according to analysts who have followed his career. As a member of Parliament from 1997 to 2002, he was known to express pro-European views, and had strong working relationships with officials in Poland. Yet, he became so powerful and influential as Mr. Kuchma\u2019s chief of staff, from 2002 to 2005, that there was a joke in Kiev political circles: Mr. Kuchma was serving as president in the Medvedchuk administration. Some Ukrainian analysts believe there is more than a grain of truth in the gag, and that Mr. Putin\u2019s goal is to create a Medvedchuk administration, if not in Kiev, then in Donetsk, where the Kremlin has made clear it would like to see the region granted autonomy similar to that of Chechnya in Russia. In May, with the crisis in eastern Ukraine deepening, Mr. Putin publicly urged that Mr. Medvedchuk be given an important role as a peace negotiator. As soon as Mr. Medvedchuk got involved, the Kremlin issued a statement expressing Mr. Putin\u2019s praise.", "paragraph_answer": "In July 2013, Mr. Putin sat next to Mr. Medvedchuk at an event the group held in Kiev and gave a speech about the deep historical ties between Russia and Ukraine, including \u201cthe common spiritual values that make us a single people.\u201d Throughout that fall, Ukrainian Choice ran an aggressive anti-gay ad campaign warning against decayed values in the West. In a precursor to Russia\u2019s now frequent charges of fascism against Kiev and the West, Mr. Medvedchuk described the European Union as the modern heir to Germany\u2019s Third Reich. A co-founder of a major law firm in Kiev, he was not always so virulently anti-Western, according to analysts who have followed his career. As a member of Parliament from 1997 to 2002, he was known to express pro-European views, and had strong working relationships with officials in Poland. Yet, he became so powerful and influential as Mr. Kuchma\u2019s chief of staff, from 2002 to 2005, that there was a joke in Kiev political circles: Mr. Kuchma was serving as president in the Medvedchuk administration. Some Ukrainian analysts believe there is more than a grain of truth in the gag, and that Mr. Putin\u2019s goal is to create a Medvedchuk administration, if not in Kiev, then in Donetsk, where the Kremlin has made clear it would like to see the region granted autonomy similar to that of Chechnya in Russia. In May, with the crisis in eastern Ukraine deepening, Mr. Putin publicly urged that Mr. Medvedchuk be given an important role as a peace negotiator. As soon as Mr. Medvedchuk got involved, the Kremlin issued a statement expressing Mr. Putin\u2019s praise.", "sentence_answer": "In July 2013, Mr. Putin sat next to Mr. Medvedchuk at an event the group held in Kiev and gave a speech about the deep historical ties between Russia and Ukraine, including \u201cthe common spiritual values that make us a single people.\u201d"} +{"question": "What years was Mr. Medvedchuk a member of Parliament?", "paragraph": "In July 2013, Mr. Putin sat next to Mr. Medvedchuk at an event the group held in Kiev and gave a speech about the deep historical ties between Russia and Ukraine, including \u201cthe common spiritual values that make us a single people.\u201d Throughout that fall, Ukrainian Choice ran an aggressive anti-gay ad campaign warning against decayed values in the West. In a precursor to Russia\u2019s now frequent charges of fascism against Kiev and the West, Mr. Medvedchuk described the European Union as the modern heir to Germany\u2019s Third Reich. A co-founder of a major law firm in Kiev, he was not always so virulently anti-Western, according to analysts who have followed his career. As a member of Parliament from 1997 to 2002, he was known to express pro-European views, and had strong working relationships with officials in Poland. Yet, he became so powerful and influential as Mr. Kuchma\u2019s chief of staff, from 2002 to 2005, that there was a joke in Kiev political circles: Mr. Kuchma was serving as president in the Medvedchuk administration. Some Ukrainian analysts believe there is more than a grain of truth in the gag, and that Mr. Putin\u2019s goal is to create a Medvedchuk administration, if not in Kiev, then in Donetsk, where the Kremlin has made clear it would like to see the region granted autonomy similar to that of Chechnya in Russia. In May, with the crisis in eastern Ukraine deepening, Mr. Putin publicly urged that Mr. Medvedchuk be given an important role as a peace negotiator. As soon as Mr. Medvedchuk got involved, the Kremlin issued a statement expressing Mr. Putin\u2019s praise.", "answer": "1997 to 2002", "sentence": "As a member of Parliament from 1997 to 2002 , he was known to express pro-European views, and had strong working relationships with officials in Poland.", "paragraph_sentence": "In July 2013, Mr. Putin sat next to Mr. Medvedchuk at an event the group held in Kiev and gave a speech about the deep historical ties between Russia and Ukraine, including \u201cthe common spiritual values that make us a single people.\u201d Throughout that fall, Ukrainian Choice ran an aggressive anti-gay ad campaign warning against decayed values in the West. In a precursor to Russia\u2019s now frequent charges of fascism against Kiev and the West, Mr. Medvedchuk described the European Union as the modern heir to Germany\u2019s Third Reich. A co-founder of a major law firm in Kiev, he was not always so virulently anti-Western, according to analysts who have followed his career. As a member of Parliament from 1997 to 2002 , he was known to express pro-European views, and had strong working relationships with officials in Poland. Yet, he became so powerful and influential as Mr. Kuchma\u2019s chief of staff, from 2002 to 2005, that there was a joke in Kiev political circles: Mr. Kuchma was serving as president in the Medvedchuk administration. Some Ukrainian analysts believe there is more than a grain of truth in the gag, and that Mr. Putin\u2019s goal is to create a Medvedchuk administration, if not in Kiev, then in Donetsk, where the Kremlin has made clear it would like to see the region granted autonomy similar to that of Chechnya in Russia. In May, with the crisis in eastern Ukraine deepening, Mr. Putin publicly urged that Mr. Medvedchuk be given an important role as a peace negotiator. As soon as Mr. Medvedchuk got involved, the Kremlin issued a statement expressing Mr. Putin\u2019s praise.", "paragraph_answer": "In July 2013, Mr. Putin sat next to Mr. Medvedchuk at an event the group held in Kiev and gave a speech about the deep historical ties between Russia and Ukraine, including \u201cthe common spiritual values that make us a single people.\u201d Throughout that fall, Ukrainian Choice ran an aggressive anti-gay ad campaign warning against decayed values in the West. In a precursor to Russia\u2019s now frequent charges of fascism against Kiev and the West, Mr. Medvedchuk described the European Union as the modern heir to Germany\u2019s Third Reich. A co-founder of a major law firm in Kiev, he was not always so virulently anti-Western, according to analysts who have followed his career. As a member of Parliament from 1997 to 2002 , he was known to express pro-European views, and had strong working relationships with officials in Poland. Yet, he became so powerful and influential as Mr. Kuchma\u2019s chief of staff, from 2002 to 2005, that there was a joke in Kiev political circles: Mr. Kuchma was serving as president in the Medvedchuk administration. Some Ukrainian analysts believe there is more than a grain of truth in the gag, and that Mr. Putin\u2019s goal is to create a Medvedchuk administration, if not in Kiev, then in Donetsk, where the Kremlin has made clear it would like to see the region granted autonomy similar to that of Chechnya in Russia. In May, with the crisis in eastern Ukraine deepening, Mr. Putin publicly urged that Mr. Medvedchuk be given an important role as a peace negotiator. As soon as Mr. Medvedchuk got involved, the Kremlin issued a statement expressing Mr. Putin\u2019s praise.", "sentence_answer": "As a member of Parliament from 1997 to 2002 , he was known to express pro-European views, and had strong working relationships with officials in Poland."} +{"question": "What views was Mr. Medvedchuk known to express?", "paragraph": "In July 2013, Mr. Putin sat next to Mr. Medvedchuk at an event the group held in Kiev and gave a speech about the deep historical ties between Russia and Ukraine, including \u201cthe common spiritual values that make us a single people.\u201d Throughout that fall, Ukrainian Choice ran an aggressive anti-gay ad campaign warning against decayed values in the West. In a precursor to Russia\u2019s now frequent charges of fascism against Kiev and the West, Mr. Medvedchuk described the European Union as the modern heir to Germany\u2019s Third Reich. A co-founder of a major law firm in Kiev, he was not always so virulently anti-Western, according to analysts who have followed his career. As a member of Parliament from 1997 to 2002, he was known to express pro-European views, and had strong working relationships with officials in Poland. Yet, he became so powerful and influential as Mr. Kuchma\u2019s chief of staff, from 2002 to 2005, that there was a joke in Kiev political circles: Mr. Kuchma was serving as president in the Medvedchuk administration. Some Ukrainian analysts believe there is more than a grain of truth in the gag, and that Mr. Putin\u2019s goal is to create a Medvedchuk administration, if not in Kiev, then in Donetsk, where the Kremlin has made clear it would like to see the region granted autonomy similar to that of Chechnya in Russia. In May, with the crisis in eastern Ukraine deepening, Mr. Putin publicly urged that Mr. Medvedchuk be given an important role as a peace negotiator. As soon as Mr. Medvedchuk got involved, the Kremlin issued a statement expressing Mr. Putin\u2019s praise.", "answer": "pro-European views", "sentence": "As a member of Parliament from 1997 to 2002, he was known to express pro-European views , and had strong working relationships with officials in Poland.", "paragraph_sentence": "In July 2013, Mr. Putin sat next to Mr. Medvedchuk at an event the group held in Kiev and gave a speech about the deep historical ties between Russia and Ukraine, including \u201cthe common spiritual values that make us a single people.\u201d Throughout that fall, Ukrainian Choice ran an aggressive anti-gay ad campaign warning against decayed values in the West. In a precursor to Russia\u2019s now frequent charges of fascism against Kiev and the West, Mr. Medvedchuk described the European Union as the modern heir to Germany\u2019s Third Reich. A co-founder of a major law firm in Kiev, he was not always so virulently anti-Western, according to analysts who have followed his career. As a member of Parliament from 1997 to 2002, he was known to express pro-European views , and had strong working relationships with officials in Poland. Yet, he became so powerful and influential as Mr. Kuchma\u2019s chief of staff, from 2002 to 2005, that there was a joke in Kiev political circles: Mr. Kuchma was serving as president in the Medvedchuk administration. Some Ukrainian analysts believe there is more than a grain of truth in the gag, and that Mr. Putin\u2019s goal is to create a Medvedchuk administration, if not in Kiev, then in Donetsk, where the Kremlin has made clear it would like to see the region granted autonomy similar to that of Chechnya in Russia. In May, with the crisis in eastern Ukraine deepening, Mr. Putin publicly urged that Mr. Medvedchuk be given an important role as a peace negotiator. As soon as Mr. Medvedchuk got involved, the Kremlin issued a statement expressing Mr. Putin\u2019s praise.", "paragraph_answer": "In July 2013, Mr. Putin sat next to Mr. Medvedchuk at an event the group held in Kiev and gave a speech about the deep historical ties between Russia and Ukraine, including \u201cthe common spiritual values that make us a single people.\u201d Throughout that fall, Ukrainian Choice ran an aggressive anti-gay ad campaign warning against decayed values in the West. In a precursor to Russia\u2019s now frequent charges of fascism against Kiev and the West, Mr. Medvedchuk described the European Union as the modern heir to Germany\u2019s Third Reich. A co-founder of a major law firm in Kiev, he was not always so virulently anti-Western, according to analysts who have followed his career. As a member of Parliament from 1997 to 2002, he was known to express pro-European views , and had strong working relationships with officials in Poland. Yet, he became so powerful and influential as Mr. Kuchma\u2019s chief of staff, from 2002 to 2005, that there was a joke in Kiev political circles: Mr. Kuchma was serving as president in the Medvedchuk administration. Some Ukrainian analysts believe there is more than a grain of truth in the gag, and that Mr. Putin\u2019s goal is to create a Medvedchuk administration, if not in Kiev, then in Donetsk, where the Kremlin has made clear it would like to see the region granted autonomy similar to that of Chechnya in Russia. In May, with the crisis in eastern Ukraine deepening, Mr. Putin publicly urged that Mr. Medvedchuk be given an important role as a peace negotiator. As soon as Mr. Medvedchuk got involved, the Kremlin issued a statement expressing Mr. Putin\u2019s praise.", "sentence_answer": "As a member of Parliament from 1997 to 2002, he was known to express pro-European views , and had strong working relationships with officials in Poland."} +{"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."} +{"question": "In what Chinese city did stocks drop 8.5%?", "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": "Shanghai", "sentence": "On July 27, stocks in Shanghai dropped 8.5 percent, which was the market\u2019s biggest daily drop in eight years.", "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": "On July 27, stocks in Shanghai dropped 8.5 percent, which was the market\u2019s biggest daily drop in eight years."} +{"question": "On what date was this 8.5% drop?", "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": "July 27", "sentence": "On July 27 , stocks in Shanghai dropped 8.5 percent, which was the market\u2019s biggest daily drop in eight years.", "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": "On July 27 , stocks in Shanghai dropped 8.5 percent, which was the market\u2019s biggest daily drop in eight years."} +{"question": "This was the biggest daily drop in how many years?", "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": "eight", "sentence": "On July 27, stocks in Shanghai dropped 8.5 percent, which was the market\u2019s biggest daily drop in eight years.", "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": "On July 27, stocks in Shanghai dropped 8.5 percent, which was the market\u2019s biggest daily drop in eight years."} +{"question": "Who is the deputy secretary of the Interior Department?", "paragraph": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "answer": "Michael Connor", "sentence": "\u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor , the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation.", "paragraph_sentence": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor , the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "paragraph_answer": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor , the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor , the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation."} +{"question": "Who is the largest wholesale water utility in the country?", "paragraph": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "answer": "Bureau of Reclamation", "sentence": "\u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation .", "paragraph_sentence": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation . \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "paragraph_answer": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation . \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation ."} +{"question": "Why will there be less water in the future?", "paragraph": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "answer": "climate change", "sentence": "The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still.", "paragraph_sentence": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "paragraph_answer": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "sentence_answer": "The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still."} +{"question": "Why do we need to undertake a giant replumbing project across the West?", "paragraph": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "answer": "now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it", "sentence": "There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it .", "paragraph_sentence": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it . The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "paragraph_answer": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it . The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "sentence_answer": "There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it ."} +{"question": "Why are water needs different in the 21st century?", "paragraph": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "answer": "millions more people who want water", "sentence": "There are now millions more people who want water , but there is far less of it.", "paragraph_sentence": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water , but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "paragraph_answer": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water , but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "sentence_answer": "There are now millions more people who want water , but there is far less of it."} +{"question": "What did the bureau's system grew into?", "paragraph": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "answer": "the largest wholesale water utility in the country", "sentence": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked.", "paragraph_sentence": " For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "paragraph_answer": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "sentence_answer": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked."} +{"question": "How many more people want water compared to the past?", "paragraph": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "answer": "millions more", "sentence": "There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it.", "paragraph_sentence": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "paragraph_answer": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "sentence_answer": "There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it."} +{"question": "Is there more or less water compared to the past?", "paragraph": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "answer": "far less", "sentence": "There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it.", "paragraph_sentence": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "paragraph_answer": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "sentence_answer": "There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it."} +{"question": "Which science is predicting that there will be even less water in the future?", "paragraph": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "answer": "climate change", "sentence": "The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still.", "paragraph_sentence": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "paragraph_answer": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "sentence_answer": "The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still."} +{"question": "Who is the deputy secretary of the Interior Department?", "paragraph": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor, the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "answer": "Michael Connor", "sentence": "\u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor , the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation.", "paragraph_sentence": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor , the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "paragraph_answer": "For most of the 1900s, the bureau\u2019s system \u2014 which grew into the largest wholesale water utility in the country \u2014 worked. But the West of the 21st century is not the West of Roosevelt. There are now millions more people who want water, but there is far less of it. The science of climate change shows that in the future, there will be less still. \u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor , the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation. \u201cIt\u2019s not enough just to conserve water. We need to rethink these projects. We have a lot of infrastructure, but a lot of it doesn\u2019t work very well anymore. We need to undertake what amounts to a giant replumbing project across the West.\u201d Mr. Connor said that in the future, the nation\u2019s water agency would have to put climate change at the center of its mission.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe have to think differently,\u201d said Michael Connor , the deputy secretary of the Interior Department, which includes the Bureau of Reclamation."} +{"question": "Who ordered the studies begun from the Bureau of Reclamation?", "paragraph": "President Obama has already started to grapple with that change. Under orders from the White House, the Bureau of Reclamation has begun studies on the impact of global warming on 22 Western water basins and is drawing up multidecade plans to begin rebuilding its Western water management systems. But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending. In Congress, the Republican majority has targeted climate change research as well as federal policies intended to stop climate change.", "answer": "the White House", "sentence": "Under orders from the White House , the Bureau of Reclamation has begun studies on the impact of global warming on 22 Western water basins and is drawing up multidecade plans to begin rebuilding its Western water management systems.", "paragraph_sentence": "President Obama has already started to grapple with that change. Under orders from the White House , the Bureau of Reclamation has begun studies on the impact of global warming on 22 Western water basins and is drawing up multidecade plans to begin rebuilding its Western water management systems. But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending. In Congress, the Republican majority has targeted climate change research as well as federal policies intended to stop climate change.", "paragraph_answer": "President Obama has already started to grapple with that change. Under orders from the White House , the Bureau of Reclamation has begun studies on the impact of global warming on 22 Western water basins and is drawing up multidecade plans to begin rebuilding its Western water management systems. But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending. In Congress, the Republican majority has targeted climate change research as well as federal policies intended to stop climate change.", "sentence_answer": "Under orders from the White House , the Bureau of Reclamation has begun studies on the impact of global warming on 22 Western water basins and is drawing up multidecade plans to begin rebuilding its Western water management systems."} +{"question": "What is impacting 22 Western water basins?", "paragraph": "President Obama has already started to grapple with that change. Under orders from the White House, the Bureau of Reclamation has begun studies on the impact of global warming on 22 Western water basins and is drawing up multidecade plans to begin rebuilding its Western water management systems. But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending. In Congress, the Republican majority has targeted climate change research as well as federal policies intended to stop climate change.", "answer": "global warming", "sentence": "Under orders from the White House, the Bureau of Reclamation has begun studies on the impact of global warming on 22 Western water basins and is drawing up multidecade plans to begin rebuilding its Western water management systems.", "paragraph_sentence": "President Obama has already started to grapple with that change. Under orders from the White House, the Bureau of Reclamation has begun studies on the impact of global warming on 22 Western water basins and is drawing up multidecade plans to begin rebuilding its Western water management systems. But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending. In Congress, the Republican majority has targeted climate change research as well as federal policies intended to stop climate change.", "paragraph_answer": "President Obama has already started to grapple with that change. Under orders from the White House, the Bureau of Reclamation has begun studies on the impact of global warming on 22 Western water basins and is drawing up multidecade plans to begin rebuilding its Western water management systems. But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending. In Congress, the Republican majority has targeted climate change research as well as federal policies intended to stop climate change.", "sentence_answer": "Under orders from the White House, the Bureau of Reclamation has begun studies on the impact of global warming on 22 Western water basins and is drawing up multidecade plans to begin rebuilding its Western water management systems."} +{"question": "How much might cost a new water infrastructure?", "paragraph": "President Obama has already started to grapple with that change. Under orders from the White House, the Bureau of Reclamation has begun studies on the impact of global warming on 22 Western water basins and is drawing up multidecade plans to begin rebuilding its Western water management systems. But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending. In Congress, the Republican majority has targeted climate change research as well as federal policies intended to stop climate change.", "answer": "billions of dollars", "sentence": "But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending.", "paragraph_sentence": "President Obama has already started to grapple with that change. Under orders from the White House, the Bureau of Reclamation has begun studies on the impact of global warming on 22 Western water basins and is drawing up multidecade plans to begin rebuilding its Western water management systems. But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending. In Congress, the Republican majority has targeted climate change research as well as federal policies intended to stop climate change.", "paragraph_answer": "President Obama has already started to grapple with that change. Under orders from the White House, the Bureau of Reclamation has begun studies on the impact of global warming on 22 Western water basins and is drawing up multidecade plans to begin rebuilding its Western water management systems. But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending. In Congress, the Republican majority has targeted climate change research as well as federal policies intended to stop climate change.", "sentence_answer": "But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending."} +{"question": "Who is focused on cutting taxes?", "paragraph": "President Obama has already started to grapple with that change. Under orders from the White House, the Bureau of Reclamation has begun studies on the impact of global warming on 22 Western water basins and is drawing up multidecade plans to begin rebuilding its Western water management systems. But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending. In Congress, the Republican majority has targeted climate change research as well as federal policies intended to stop climate change.", "answer": "Republicans", "sentence": "But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending.", "paragraph_sentence": "President Obama has already started to grapple with that change. Under orders from the White House, the Bureau of Reclamation has begun studies on the impact of global warming on 22 Western water basins and is drawing up multidecade plans to begin rebuilding its Western water management systems. But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending. In Congress, the Republican majority has targeted climate change research as well as federal policies intended to stop climate change.", "paragraph_answer": "President Obama has already started to grapple with that change. Under orders from the White House, the Bureau of Reclamation has begun studies on the impact of global warming on 22 Western water basins and is drawing up multidecade plans to begin rebuilding its Western water management systems. But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending. In Congress, the Republican majority has targeted climate change research as well as federal policies intended to stop climate change.", "sentence_answer": "But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending."} +{"question": "What are aiming to stop the federal policies?", "paragraph": "President Obama has already started to grapple with that change. Under orders from the White House, the Bureau of Reclamation has begun studies on the impact of global warming on 22 Western water basins and is drawing up multidecade plans to begin rebuilding its Western water management systems. But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending. In Congress, the Republican majority has targeted climate change research as well as federal policies intended to stop climate change.", "answer": "Republicans", "sentence": "But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending.", "paragraph_sentence": "President Obama has already started to grapple with that change. Under orders from the White House, the Bureau of Reclamation has begun studies on the impact of global warming on 22 Western water basins and is drawing up multidecade plans to begin rebuilding its Western water management systems. But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending. In Congress, the Republican majority has targeted climate change research as well as federal policies intended to stop climate change.", "paragraph_answer": "President Obama has already started to grapple with that change. Under orders from the White House, the Bureau of Reclamation has begun studies on the impact of global warming on 22 Western water basins and is drawing up multidecade plans to begin rebuilding its Western water management systems. But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending. In Congress, the Republican majority has targeted climate change research as well as federal policies intended to stop climate change.", "sentence_answer": "But a new water infrastructure across half of the United States could cost taxpayers billions of dollars \u2014 at a moment when Republicans are still focused on cutting taxes and lowering government spending."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What is causing the attacks to the bureau?", "paragraph": "The bureau is in the meantime coming under fire from lawmakers of both parties for failing to meet the challenges of today\u2019s searing drought. Representative Kevin McCarthy, the majority leader and a Republican from California\u2019s parched inland, has criticized the bureau\u2019s efforts in his state. Lawmakers like Mr. McCarthy are particularly furious that the bureau and the State of California continue to direct scarce water into rivers to support fish habitat, even as farms wither and families struggle to make do with less water.", "answer": "today\u2019s searing drought", "sentence": "The bureau is in the meantime coming under fire from lawmakers of both parties for failing to meet the challenges of today\u2019s searing drought .", "paragraph_sentence": " The bureau is in the meantime coming under fire from lawmakers of both parties for failing to meet the challenges of today\u2019s searing drought . Representative Kevin McCarthy, the majority leader and a Republican from California\u2019s parched inland, has criticized the bureau\u2019s efforts in his state. Lawmakers like Mr. McCarthy are particularly furious that the bureau and the State of California continue to direct scarce water into rivers to support fish habitat, even as farms wither and families struggle to make do with less water.", "paragraph_answer": "The bureau is in the meantime coming under fire from lawmakers of both parties for failing to meet the challenges of today\u2019s searing drought . Representative Kevin McCarthy, the majority leader and a Republican from California\u2019s parched inland, has criticized the bureau\u2019s efforts in his state. Lawmakers like Mr. McCarthy are particularly furious that the bureau and the State of California continue to direct scarce water into rivers to support fish habitat, even as farms wither and families struggle to make do with less water.", "sentence_answer": "The bureau is in the meantime coming under fire from lawmakers of both parties for failing to meet the challenges of today\u2019s searing drought ."} +{"question": "Who is the leader of the Republican party in California?", "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": "Kevin McCarthy", "sentence": "Representative Kevin McCarthy , the majority leader and a Republican from California\u2019s parched inland, has criticized the bureau\u2019s efforts in his state.", "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": "Representative Kevin McCarthy , the majority leader and a Republican from California\u2019s parched inland, has criticized the bureau\u2019s efforts in his state."} +{"question": "Why should the bureau direct more water into rivers?", "paragraph": "The bureau is in the meantime coming under fire from lawmakers of both parties for failing to meet the challenges of today\u2019s searing drought. Representative Kevin McCarthy, the majority leader and a Republican from California\u2019s parched inland, has criticized the bureau\u2019s efforts in his state. Lawmakers like Mr. McCarthy are particularly furious that the bureau and the State of California continue to direct scarce water into rivers to support fish habitat, even as farms wither and families struggle to make do with less water.", "answer": "to support fish habitat", "sentence": "Lawmakers like Mr. McCarthy are particularly furious that the bureau and the State of California continue to direct scarce water into rivers to support fish habitat , even as farms wither and families struggle to make do with less water.", "paragraph_sentence": "The bureau is in the meantime coming under fire from lawmakers of both parties for failing to meet the challenges of today\u2019s searing drought. Representative Kevin McCarthy, the majority leader and a Republican from California\u2019s parched inland, has criticized the bureau\u2019s efforts in his state. Lawmakers like Mr. McCarthy are particularly furious that the bureau and the State of California continue to direct scarce water into rivers to support fish habitat , even as farms wither and families struggle to make do with less water. ", "paragraph_answer": "The bureau is in the meantime coming under fire from lawmakers of both parties for failing to meet the challenges of today\u2019s searing drought. Representative Kevin McCarthy, the majority leader and a Republican from California\u2019s parched inland, has criticized the bureau\u2019s efforts in his state. Lawmakers like Mr. McCarthy are particularly furious that the bureau and the State of California continue to direct scarce water into rivers to support fish habitat , even as farms wither and families struggle to make do with less water.", "sentence_answer": "Lawmakers like Mr. McCarthy are particularly furious that the bureau and the State of California continue to direct scarce water into rivers to support fish habitat , even as farms wither and families struggle to make do with less water."} +{"question": "Who is struggling because of the lack of water?", "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": "farms wither and families", "sentence": "Lawmakers like Mr. McCarthy are particularly furious that the bureau and the State of California continue to direct scarce water into rivers to support fish habitat, even as farms wither and families struggle to make do with less water.", "paragraph_sentence": "The bureau is in the meantime coming under fire from lawmakers of both parties for failing to meet the challenges of today\u2019s searing drought. Representative Kevin McCarthy, the majority leader and a Republican from California\u2019s parched inland, has criticized the bureau\u2019s efforts in his state. Lawmakers like Mr. McCarthy are particularly furious that the bureau and the State of California continue to direct scarce water into rivers to support fish habitat, even as farms wither and families struggle to make do with less water. ", "paragraph_answer": "The bureau is in the meantime coming under fire from lawmakers of both parties for failing to meet the challenges of today\u2019s searing drought. Representative Kevin McCarthy, the majority leader and a Republican from California\u2019s parched inland, has criticized the bureau\u2019s efforts in his state. Lawmakers like Mr. McCarthy are particularly furious that the bureau and the State of California continue to direct scarce water into rivers to support fish habitat, even as farms wither and families struggle to make do with less water.", "sentence_answer": "Lawmakers like Mr. McCarthy are particularly furious that the bureau and the State of California continue to direct scarce water into rivers to support fish habitat, even as farms wither and families struggle to make do with less water."} +{"question": "The visitors that described the scent as Italian sausage were in which city?", "paragraph": "Visitors in the Chicago crowd didn\u2019t get outright stench, but they did get a hands-on experience: Dr. Still and Mr. Pollak began passing around pieces of Spike\u2019s spathe to the visitors. On Tuesday, they said that Spike was beginning to emit a more putrid odor \u2014 a bad sign regarding nearly anything else in the world, but a good sign for this plant \u2014 and that visiting hours would be extended until Thursday. In Denver, the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier. They described the scent as rotting cabbage, dead mice and, oddly, Italian sausage when they stepped close to lean into the blooming flower, named Stinky. Stinky lasted a few days before it crumpled and entered a dormant phase.", "answer": "Denver", "sentence": "In Denver , the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier.", "paragraph_sentence": "Visitors in the Chicago crowd didn\u2019t get outright stench, but they did get a hands-on experience: Dr. Still and Mr. Pollak began passing around pieces of Spike\u2019s spathe to the visitors. On Tuesday, they said that Spike was beginning to emit a more putrid odor \u2014 a bad sign regarding nearly anything else in the world, but a good sign for this plant \u2014 and that visiting hours would be extended until Thursday. In Denver , the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier. They described the scent as rotting cabbage, dead mice and, oddly, Italian sausage when they stepped close to lean into the blooming flower, named Stinky. Stinky lasted a few days before it crumpled and entered a dormant phase.", "paragraph_answer": "Visitors in the Chicago crowd didn\u2019t get outright stench, but they did get a hands-on experience: Dr. Still and Mr. Pollak began passing around pieces of Spike\u2019s spathe to the visitors. On Tuesday, they said that Spike was beginning to emit a more putrid odor \u2014 a bad sign regarding nearly anything else in the world, but a good sign for this plant \u2014 and that visiting hours would be extended until Thursday. In Denver , the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier. They described the scent as rotting cabbage, dead mice and, oddly, Italian sausage when they stepped close to lean into the blooming flower, named Stinky. Stinky lasted a few days before it crumpled and entered a dormant phase.", "sentence_answer": "In Denver , the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier."} +{"question": "Spike is the name of the flow in what city?", "paragraph": "Visitors in the Chicago crowd didn\u2019t get outright stench, but they did get a hands-on experience: Dr. Still and Mr. Pollak began passing around pieces of Spike\u2019s spathe to the visitors. On Tuesday, they said that Spike was beginning to emit a more putrid odor \u2014 a bad sign regarding nearly anything else in the world, but a good sign for this plant \u2014 and that visiting hours would be extended until Thursday. In Denver, the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier. They described the scent as rotting cabbage, dead mice and, oddly, Italian sausage when they stepped close to lean into the blooming flower, named Stinky. Stinky lasted a few days before it crumpled and entered a dormant phase.", "answer": "Chicago", "sentence": "Visitors in the Chicago crowd didn\u2019t get outright stench, but they did get a hands-on experience: Dr. Still and Mr. Pollak began passing around pieces of Spike\u2019s spathe to the visitors.", "paragraph_sentence": " Visitors in the Chicago crowd didn\u2019t get outright stench, but they did get a hands-on experience: Dr. Still and Mr. Pollak began passing around pieces of Spike\u2019s spathe to the visitors. On Tuesday, they said that Spike was beginning to emit a more putrid odor \u2014 a bad sign regarding nearly anything else in the world, but a good sign for this plant \u2014 and that visiting hours would be extended until Thursday. In Denver, the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier. They described the scent as rotting cabbage, dead mice and, oddly, Italian sausage when they stepped close to lean into the blooming flower, named Stinky. Stinky lasted a few days before it crumpled and entered a dormant phase.", "paragraph_answer": "Visitors in the Chicago crowd didn\u2019t get outright stench, but they did get a hands-on experience: Dr. Still and Mr. Pollak began passing around pieces of Spike\u2019s spathe to the visitors. On Tuesday, they said that Spike was beginning to emit a more putrid odor \u2014 a bad sign regarding nearly anything else in the world, but a good sign for this plant \u2014 and that visiting hours would be extended until Thursday. In Denver, the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier. They described the scent as rotting cabbage, dead mice and, oddly, Italian sausage when they stepped close to lean into the blooming flower, named Stinky. Stinky lasted a few days before it crumpled and entered a dormant phase.", "sentence_answer": "Visitors in the Chicago crowd didn\u2019t get outright stench, but they did get a hands-on experience: Dr. Still and Mr. Pollak began passing around pieces of Spike\u2019s spathe to the visitors."} +{"question": "Chicago would extend their visitor hours until what day?", "paragraph": "Visitors in the Chicago crowd didn\u2019t get outright stench, but they did get a hands-on experience: Dr. Still and Mr. Pollak began passing around pieces of Spike\u2019s spathe to the visitors. On Tuesday, they said that Spike was beginning to emit a more putrid odor \u2014 a bad sign regarding nearly anything else in the world, but a good sign for this plant \u2014 and that visiting hours would be extended until Thursday. In Denver, the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier. They described the scent as rotting cabbage, dead mice and, oddly, Italian sausage when they stepped close to lean into the blooming flower, named Stinky. Stinky lasted a few days before it crumpled and entered a dormant phase.", "answer": "Thursday", "sentence": "On Tuesday, they said that Spike was beginning to emit a more putrid odor \u2014 a bad sign regarding nearly anything else in the world, but a good sign for this plant \u2014 and that visiting hours would be extended until Thursday .", "paragraph_sentence": "Visitors in the Chicago crowd didn\u2019t get outright stench, but they did get a hands-on experience: Dr. Still and Mr. Pollak began passing around pieces of Spike\u2019s spathe to the visitors. On Tuesday, they said that Spike was beginning to emit a more putrid odor \u2014 a bad sign regarding nearly anything else in the world, but a good sign for this plant \u2014 and that visiting hours would be extended until Thursday . In Denver, the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier. They described the scent as rotting cabbage, dead mice and, oddly, Italian sausage when they stepped close to lean into the blooming flower, named Stinky. Stinky lasted a few days before it crumpled and entered a dormant phase.", "paragraph_answer": "Visitors in the Chicago crowd didn\u2019t get outright stench, but they did get a hands-on experience: Dr. Still and Mr. Pollak began passing around pieces of Spike\u2019s spathe to the visitors. On Tuesday, they said that Spike was beginning to emit a more putrid odor \u2014 a bad sign regarding nearly anything else in the world, but a good sign for this plant \u2014 and that visiting hours would be extended until Thursday . In Denver, the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier. They described the scent as rotting cabbage, dead mice and, oddly, Italian sausage when they stepped close to lean into the blooming flower, named Stinky. Stinky lasted a few days before it crumpled and entered a dormant phase.", "sentence_answer": "On Tuesday, they said that Spike was beginning to emit a more putrid odor \u2014 a bad sign regarding nearly anything else in the world, but a good sign for this plant \u2014 and that visiting hours would be extended until Thursday ."} +{"question": "What is the name of the Denver flower?", "paragraph": "Visitors in the Chicago crowd didn\u2019t get outright stench, but they did get a hands-on experience: Dr. Still and Mr. Pollak began passing around pieces of Spike\u2019s spathe to the visitors. On Tuesday, they said that Spike was beginning to emit a more putrid odor \u2014 a bad sign regarding nearly anything else in the world, but a good sign for this plant \u2014 and that visiting hours would be extended until Thursday. In Denver, the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier. They described the scent as rotting cabbage, dead mice and, oddly, Italian sausage when they stepped close to lean into the blooming flower, named Stinky. Stinky lasted a few days before it crumpled and entered a dormant phase.", "answer": "Stinky", "sentence": "They described the scent as rotting cabbage, dead mice and, oddly, Italian sausage when they stepped close to lean into the blooming flower, named Stinky .", "paragraph_sentence": "Visitors in the Chicago crowd didn\u2019t get outright stench, but they did get a hands-on experience: Dr. Still and Mr. Pollak began passing around pieces of Spike\u2019s spathe to the visitors. On Tuesday, they said that Spike was beginning to emit a more putrid odor \u2014 a bad sign regarding nearly anything else in the world, but a good sign for this plant \u2014 and that visiting hours would be extended until Thursday. In Denver, the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier. They described the scent as rotting cabbage, dead mice and, oddly, Italian sausage when they stepped close to lean into the blooming flower, named Stinky . Stinky lasted a few days before it crumpled and entered a dormant phase.", "paragraph_answer": "Visitors in the Chicago crowd didn\u2019t get outright stench, but they did get a hands-on experience: Dr. Still and Mr. Pollak began passing around pieces of Spike\u2019s spathe to the visitors. On Tuesday, they said that Spike was beginning to emit a more putrid odor \u2014 a bad sign regarding nearly anything else in the world, but a good sign for this plant \u2014 and that visiting hours would be extended until Thursday. In Denver, the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier. They described the scent as rotting cabbage, dead mice and, oddly, Italian sausage when they stepped close to lean into the blooming flower, named Stinky . Stinky lasted a few days before it crumpled and entered a dormant phase.", "sentence_answer": "They described the scent as rotting cabbage, dead mice and, oddly, Italian sausage when they stepped close to lean into the blooming flower, named Stinky ."} +{"question": "What phase will the flower enter after it crumples?", "paragraph": "Visitors in the Chicago crowd didn\u2019t get outright stench, but they did get a hands-on experience: Dr. Still and Mr. Pollak began passing around pieces of Spike\u2019s spathe to the visitors. On Tuesday, they said that Spike was beginning to emit a more putrid odor \u2014 a bad sign regarding nearly anything else in the world, but a good sign for this plant \u2014 and that visiting hours would be extended until Thursday. In Denver, the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier. They described the scent as rotting cabbage, dead mice and, oddly, Italian sausage when they stepped close to lean into the blooming flower, named Stinky. Stinky lasted a few days before it crumpled and entered a dormant phase.", "answer": "dormant", "sentence": "Stinky lasted a few days before it crumpled and entered a dormant phase.", "paragraph_sentence": "Visitors in the Chicago crowd didn\u2019t get outright stench, but they did get a hands-on experience: Dr. Still and Mr. Pollak began passing around pieces of Spike\u2019s spathe to the visitors. On Tuesday, they said that Spike was beginning to emit a more putrid odor \u2014 a bad sign regarding nearly anything else in the world, but a good sign for this plant \u2014 and that visiting hours would be extended until Thursday. In Denver, the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier. They described the scent as rotting cabbage, dead mice and, oddly, Italian sausage when they stepped close to lean into the blooming flower, named Stinky. Stinky lasted a few days before it crumpled and entered a dormant phase. ", "paragraph_answer": "Visitors in the Chicago crowd didn\u2019t get outright stench, but they did get a hands-on experience: Dr. Still and Mr. Pollak began passing around pieces of Spike\u2019s spathe to the visitors. On Tuesday, they said that Spike was beginning to emit a more putrid odor \u2014 a bad sign regarding nearly anything else in the world, but a good sign for this plant \u2014 and that visiting hours would be extended until Thursday. In Denver, the visitors who had been hoping for a stinky celebration had gotten luckier. They described the scent as rotting cabbage, dead mice and, oddly, Italian sausage when they stepped close to lean into the blooming flower, named Stinky. Stinky lasted a few days before it crumpled and entered a dormant phase.", "sentence_answer": "Stinky lasted a few days before it crumpled and entered a dormant phase."} +{"question": "What day will Spike be moved?", "paragraph": "Spike will be moved on Thursday back into a production greenhouse, where it will either pollinate (unlikely) or enter a dormant phase. Dr. Still said that even its failure to bloom would provide more opportunities to extend what experts know about the plant, which, given its relatively short history as a research specimen, is comparatively little. Think of these huge plants as the giant panda of the plant world: Researchers are trying to increase the genetic diversity of the fragile plants, but their erratic blooming schedule can make it difficult. Experts at gardens around the country have passed along knowledge and resources when possible. In the case of Spike, officials at the Denver Botanic Gardens rushed to ship frozen pollen to help Spike bloom, but they also offered practical advice. \u201cOne of the big things that we learned was how to deal with crowd control,\u201d Mr. Pollak said.", "answer": "Thursday", "sentence": "Spike will be moved on Thursday back into a production greenhouse, where it will either pollinate (unlikely) or enter a dormant phase.", "paragraph_sentence": " Spike will be moved on Thursday back into a production greenhouse, where it will either pollinate (unlikely) or enter a dormant phase. Dr. Still said that even its failure to bloom would provide more opportunities to extend what experts know about the plant, which, given its relatively short history as a research specimen, is comparatively little. Think of these huge plants as the giant panda of the plant world: Researchers are trying to increase the genetic diversity of the fragile plants, but their erratic blooming schedule can make it difficult. Experts at gardens around the country have passed along knowledge and resources when possible. In the case of Spike, officials at the Denver Botanic Gardens rushed to ship frozen pollen to help Spike bloom, but they also offered practical advice. \u201cOne of the big things that we learned was how to deal with crowd control,\u201d Mr. Pollak said.", "paragraph_answer": "Spike will be moved on Thursday back into a production greenhouse, where it will either pollinate (unlikely) or enter a dormant phase. Dr. Still said that even its failure to bloom would provide more opportunities to extend what experts know about the plant, which, given its relatively short history as a research specimen, is comparatively little. Think of these huge plants as the giant panda of the plant world: Researchers are trying to increase the genetic diversity of the fragile plants, but their erratic blooming schedule can make it difficult. Experts at gardens around the country have passed along knowledge and resources when possible. In the case of Spike, officials at the Denver Botanic Gardens rushed to ship frozen pollen to help Spike bloom, but they also offered practical advice. \u201cOne of the big things that we learned was how to deal with crowd control,\u201d Mr. Pollak said.", "sentence_answer": "Spike will be moved on Thursday back into a production greenhouse, where it will either pollinate (unlikely) or enter a dormant phase."} +{"question": "These huge plants are compared to what animal?", "paragraph": "Spike will be moved on Thursday back into a production greenhouse, where it will either pollinate (unlikely) or enter a dormant phase. Dr. Still said that even its failure to bloom would provide more opportunities to extend what experts know about the plant, which, given its relatively short history as a research specimen, is comparatively little. Think of these huge plants as the giant panda of the plant world: Researchers are trying to increase the genetic diversity of the fragile plants, but their erratic blooming schedule can make it difficult. Experts at gardens around the country have passed along knowledge and resources when possible. In the case of Spike, officials at the Denver Botanic Gardens rushed to ship frozen pollen to help Spike bloom, but they also offered practical advice. \u201cOne of the big things that we learned was how to deal with crowd control,\u201d Mr. Pollak said.", "answer": "panda", "sentence": "Think of these huge plants as the giant panda of the plant world: Researchers are trying to increase the genetic diversity of the fragile plants, but their erratic blooming schedule can make it difficult.", "paragraph_sentence": "Spike will be moved on Thursday back into a production greenhouse, where it will either pollinate (unlikely) or enter a dormant phase. Dr. Still said that even its failure to bloom would provide more opportunities to extend what experts know about the plant, which, given its relatively short history as a research specimen, is comparatively little. Think of these huge plants as the giant panda of the plant world: Researchers are trying to increase the genetic diversity of the fragile plants, but their erratic blooming schedule can make it difficult. Experts at gardens around the country have passed along knowledge and resources when possible. In the case of Spike, officials at the Denver Botanic Gardens rushed to ship frozen pollen to help Spike bloom, but they also offered practical advice. \u201cOne of the big things that we learned was how to deal with crowd control,\u201d Mr. Pollak said.", "paragraph_answer": "Spike will be moved on Thursday back into a production greenhouse, where it will either pollinate (unlikely) or enter a dormant phase. Dr. Still said that even its failure to bloom would provide more opportunities to extend what experts know about the plant, which, given its relatively short history as a research specimen, is comparatively little. Think of these huge plants as the giant panda of the plant world: Researchers are trying to increase the genetic diversity of the fragile plants, but their erratic blooming schedule can make it difficult. Experts at gardens around the country have passed along knowledge and resources when possible. In the case of Spike, officials at the Denver Botanic Gardens rushed to ship frozen pollen to help Spike bloom, but they also offered practical advice. \u201cOne of the big things that we learned was how to deal with crowd control,\u201d Mr. Pollak said.", "sentence_answer": "Think of these huge plants as the giant panda of the plant world: Researchers are trying to increase the genetic diversity of the fragile plants, but their erratic blooming schedule can make it difficult."} +{"question": "Is it likely or unlikely that the flower called Spike will pollinate?", "paragraph": "Spike will be moved on Thursday back into a production greenhouse, where it will either pollinate (unlikely) or enter a dormant phase. Dr. Still said that even its failure to bloom would provide more opportunities to extend what experts know about the plant, which, given its relatively short history as a research specimen, is comparatively little. Think of these huge plants as the giant panda of the plant world: Researchers are trying to increase the genetic diversity of the fragile plants, but their erratic blooming schedule can make it difficult. Experts at gardens around the country have passed along knowledge and resources when possible. In the case of Spike, officials at the Denver Botanic Gardens rushed to ship frozen pollen to help Spike bloom, but they also offered practical advice. \u201cOne of the big things that we learned was how to deal with crowd control,\u201d Mr. Pollak said.", "answer": "unlikely", "sentence": "Spike will be moved on Thursday back into a production greenhouse, where it will either pollinate ( unlikely ) or enter a dormant phase.", "paragraph_sentence": " Spike will be moved on Thursday back into a production greenhouse, where it will either pollinate ( unlikely ) or enter a dormant phase. Dr. Still said that even its failure to bloom would provide more opportunities to extend what experts know about the plant, which, given its relatively short history as a research specimen, is comparatively little. Think of these huge plants as the giant panda of the plant world: Researchers are trying to increase the genetic diversity of the fragile plants, but their erratic blooming schedule can make it difficult. Experts at gardens around the country have passed along knowledge and resources when possible. In the case of Spike, officials at the Denver Botanic Gardens rushed to ship frozen pollen to help Spike bloom, but they also offered practical advice. \u201cOne of the big things that we learned was how to deal with crowd control,\u201d Mr. Pollak said.", "paragraph_answer": "Spike will be moved on Thursday back into a production greenhouse, where it will either pollinate ( unlikely ) or enter a dormant phase. Dr. Still said that even its failure to bloom would provide more opportunities to extend what experts know about the plant, which, given its relatively short history as a research specimen, is comparatively little. Think of these huge plants as the giant panda of the plant world: Researchers are trying to increase the genetic diversity of the fragile plants, but their erratic blooming schedule can make it difficult. Experts at gardens around the country have passed along knowledge and resources when possible. In the case of Spike, officials at the Denver Botanic Gardens rushed to ship frozen pollen to help Spike bloom, but they also offered practical advice. \u201cOne of the big things that we learned was how to deal with crowd control,\u201d Mr. Pollak said.", "sentence_answer": "Spike will be moved on Thursday back into a production greenhouse, where it will either pollinate ( unlikely ) or enter a dormant phase."} +{"question": "What did Denver Botanic Gardens rush to ship?", "paragraph": "Spike will be moved on Thursday back into a production greenhouse, where it will either pollinate (unlikely) or enter a dormant phase. Dr. Still said that even its failure to bloom would provide more opportunities to extend what experts know about the plant, which, given its relatively short history as a research specimen, is comparatively little. Think of these huge plants as the giant panda of the plant world: Researchers are trying to increase the genetic diversity of the fragile plants, but their erratic blooming schedule can make it difficult. Experts at gardens around the country have passed along knowledge and resources when possible. In the case of Spike, officials at the Denver Botanic Gardens rushed to ship frozen pollen to help Spike bloom, but they also offered practical advice. \u201cOne of the big things that we learned was how to deal with crowd control,\u201d Mr. Pollak said.", "answer": "frozen pollen", "sentence": "In the case of Spike, officials at the Denver Botanic Gardens rushed to ship frozen pollen to help Spike bloom, but they also offered practical advice.", "paragraph_sentence": "Spike will be moved on Thursday back into a production greenhouse, where it will either pollinate (unlikely) or enter a dormant phase. Dr. Still said that even its failure to bloom would provide more opportunities to extend what experts know about the plant, which, given its relatively short history as a research specimen, is comparatively little. Think of these huge plants as the giant panda of the plant world: Researchers are trying to increase the genetic diversity of the fragile plants, but their erratic blooming schedule can make it difficult. Experts at gardens around the country have passed along knowledge and resources when possible. In the case of Spike, officials at the Denver Botanic Gardens rushed to ship frozen pollen to help Spike bloom, but they also offered practical advice. \u201cOne of the big things that we learned was how to deal with crowd control,\u201d Mr. Pollak said.", "paragraph_answer": "Spike will be moved on Thursday back into a production greenhouse, where it will either pollinate (unlikely) or enter a dormant phase. Dr. Still said that even its failure to bloom would provide more opportunities to extend what experts know about the plant, which, given its relatively short history as a research specimen, is comparatively little. Think of these huge plants as the giant panda of the plant world: Researchers are trying to increase the genetic diversity of the fragile plants, but their erratic blooming schedule can make it difficult. Experts at gardens around the country have passed along knowledge and resources when possible. In the case of Spike, officials at the Denver Botanic Gardens rushed to ship frozen pollen to help Spike bloom, but they also offered practical advice. \u201cOne of the big things that we learned was how to deal with crowd control,\u201d Mr. Pollak said.", "sentence_answer": "In the case of Spike, officials at the Denver Botanic Gardens rushed to ship frozen pollen to help Spike bloom, but they also offered practical advice."} +{"question": "What was one of the things Denver learned how to deal with?", "paragraph": "Spike will be moved on Thursday back into a production greenhouse, where it will either pollinate (unlikely) or enter a dormant phase. Dr. Still said that even its failure to bloom would provide more opportunities to extend what experts know about the plant, which, given its relatively short history as a research specimen, is comparatively little. Think of these huge plants as the giant panda of the plant world: Researchers are trying to increase the genetic diversity of the fragile plants, but their erratic blooming schedule can make it difficult. Experts at gardens around the country have passed along knowledge and resources when possible. In the case of Spike, officials at the Denver Botanic Gardens rushed to ship frozen pollen to help Spike bloom, but they also offered practical advice. \u201cOne of the big things that we learned was how to deal with crowd control,\u201d Mr. Pollak said.", "answer": "crowd control", "sentence": "\u201cOne of the big things that we learned was how to deal with crowd control ,\u201d Mr. Pollak said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Spike will be moved on Thursday back into a production greenhouse, where it will either pollinate (unlikely) or enter a dormant phase. Dr. Still said that even its failure to bloom would provide more opportunities to extend what experts know about the plant, which, given its relatively short history as a research specimen, is comparatively little. Think of these huge plants as the giant panda of the plant world: Researchers are trying to increase the genetic diversity of the fragile plants, but their erratic blooming schedule can make it difficult. Experts at gardens around the country have passed along knowledge and resources when possible. In the case of Spike, officials at the Denver Botanic Gardens rushed to ship frozen pollen to help Spike bloom, but they also offered practical advice. \u201cOne of the big things that we learned was how to deal with crowd control ,\u201d Mr. Pollak said. ", "paragraph_answer": "Spike will be moved on Thursday back into a production greenhouse, where it will either pollinate (unlikely) or enter a dormant phase. Dr. Still said that even its failure to bloom would provide more opportunities to extend what experts know about the plant, which, given its relatively short history as a research specimen, is comparatively little. Think of these huge plants as the giant panda of the plant world: Researchers are trying to increase the genetic diversity of the fragile plants, but their erratic blooming schedule can make it difficult. Experts at gardens around the country have passed along knowledge and resources when possible. In the case of Spike, officials at the Denver Botanic Gardens rushed to ship frozen pollen to help Spike bloom, but they also offered practical advice. \u201cOne of the big things that we learned was how to deal with crowd control ,\u201d Mr. Pollak said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cOne of the big things that we learned was how to deal with crowd control ,\u201d Mr. Pollak said."} +{"question": "What night did Joan Shelley perform in Brooklyn?", "paragraph": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral, with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album (No Quarter Records), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "answer": "Thursday", "sentence": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.", "paragraph_sentence": " Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral, with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album (No Quarter Records), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral, with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album (No Quarter Records), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn."} +{"question": "Where in Brooklyn did Joan Shelley perform?", "paragraph": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral, with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album (No Quarter Records), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "answer": "Union Pool", "sentence": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.", "paragraph_sentence": " Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral, with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album (No Quarter Records), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral, with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album (No Quarter Records), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn."} +{"question": "What part of Brooklyn did Joan Shelley perform in?", "paragraph": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral, with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album (No Quarter Records), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "answer": "Williamsburg", "sentence": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg , Brooklyn.", "paragraph_sentence": " Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg , Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral, with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album (No Quarter Records), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg , Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral, with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album (No Quarter Records), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg , Brooklyn."} +{"question": "What kind of music does Joan Shelley perform?", "paragraph": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral, with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album (No Quarter Records), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "answer": "folky and pastoral", "sentence": "Her music is folky and pastoral , with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent.", "paragraph_sentence": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral , with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album (No Quarter Records), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral , with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album (No Quarter Records), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Her music is folky and pastoral , with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent."} +{"question": "What record label does Joan Shelley work for?", "paragraph": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral, with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album (No Quarter Records), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "answer": "No Quarter Records", "sentence": "In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album ( No Quarter Records ), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral, with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album ( No Quarter Records ), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Stars shine overhead, and rivers flow nearby in songs by Joan Shelley, who performed on Thursday night at Union Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her music is folky and pastoral, with a sense of scale that makes her humble about her place in mankind and the universe, and her songs are serene but never complacent. In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album ( No Quarter Records ), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In \u201cElectric Ursa,\u201d the title song of her current album ( No Quarter Records ), Ms. Shelley sang, \u201cUnder your stars, your earthless movement/We are only feeble humans.\u201d"} +{"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."} +{"question": "What is the name of Joan Shelley's second solo album?", "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": "Electric Ursa", "sentence": "Ms. Shelley is from Louisville, Ky., where she has recorded in duos and groups; \u201c Electric Ursa \u201d is her second solo album.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Shelley is from Louisville, Ky., where she has recorded in duos and groups; \u201c Electric 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; \u201c Electric 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; \u201c Electric Ursa \u201d is her second solo album."} +{"question": "What is the name of Joan Shelley's guitar player?", "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": "Nathan Salsburg", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "Who sang harmonies with Joan Shelley at Union Pool?", "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": "Glen Dentinger.", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "What Smith's song did Joan Shelley perform at Union Pool?", "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": "Reel Around the Fountain", "sentence": "Mr. Salsburg, also from Louisville, had started the evening with guitar instrumentals (including a folkified version of the Smiths\u2019 \u201c Reel Around the Fountain \u201d); Nathan Bowles, a banjoist and singer who also shared the bill, joined Ms. Shelley\u2019s group for one song.", "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 \u201c Reel 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 \u201c Reel 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": "Mr. Salsburg, also from Louisville, had started the evening with guitar instrumentals (including a folkified version of the Smiths\u2019 \u201c Reel Around the Fountain \u201d); Nathan Bowles, a banjoist and singer who also shared the bill, joined Ms. Shelley\u2019s group for one song."} +{"question": "What month was Electric Ursa released?", "paragraph": "Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete. One, with a melody that would have suited the Carter Family, captured the moment in a breakup when the thought of freedom balances a sense of loss. In that song, and throughout the set, she was open yet composed, never pushing or overplaying the music; she let the songs speak for themselves. With its quiet purity, the music held the club audience rapt.", "answer": "September", "sentence": "Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September , Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete.", "paragraph_sentence": " Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September , Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete. One, with a melody that would have suited the Carter Family, captured the moment in a breakup when the thought of freedom balances a sense of loss. In that song, and throughout the set, she was open yet composed, never pushing or overplaying the music; she let the songs speak for themselves. With its quiet purity, the music held the club audience rapt.", "paragraph_answer": "Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September , Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete. One, with a melody that would have suited the Carter Family, captured the moment in a breakup when the thought of freedom balances a sense of loss. In that song, and throughout the set, she was open yet composed, never pushing or overplaying the music; she let the songs speak for themselves. With its quiet purity, the music held the club audience rapt.", "sentence_answer": "Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September , Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete."} +{"question": "What did Joan Shelley devote much of her set to?", "paragraph": "Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete. One, with a melody that would have suited the Carter Family, captured the moment in a breakup when the thought of freedom balances a sense of loss. In that song, and throughout the set, she was open yet composed, never pushing or overplaying the music; she let the songs speak for themselves. With its quiet purity, the music held the club audience rapt.", "answer": "new songs", "sentence": "Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete.", "paragraph_sentence": " Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete. One, with a melody that would have suited the Carter Family, captured the moment in a breakup when the thought of freedom balances a sense of loss. In that song, and throughout the set, she was open yet composed, never pushing or overplaying the music; she let the songs speak for themselves. With its quiet purity, the music held the club audience rapt.", "paragraph_answer": "Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete. One, with a melody that would have suited the Carter Family, captured the moment in a breakup when the thought of freedom balances a sense of loss. In that song, and throughout the set, she was open yet composed, never pushing or overplaying the music; she let the songs speak for themselves. With its quiet purity, the music held the club audience rapt.", "sentence_answer": "Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete."} +{"question": "What personal tragedy was described by the song with the melody that would have suited the Carter family?", "paragraph": "Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete. One, with a melody that would have suited the Carter Family, captured the moment in a breakup when the thought of freedom balances a sense of loss. In that song, and throughout the set, she was open yet composed, never pushing or overplaying the music; she let the songs speak for themselves. With its quiet purity, the music held the club audience rapt.", "answer": "a breakup", "sentence": "One, with a melody that would have suited the Carter Family, captured the moment in a breakup when the thought of freedom balances a sense of loss.", "paragraph_sentence": "Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete. One, with a melody that would have suited the Carter Family, captured the moment in a breakup when the thought of freedom balances a sense of loss. In that song, and throughout the set, she was open yet composed, never pushing or overplaying the music; she let the songs speak for themselves. With its quiet purity, the music held the club audience rapt.", "paragraph_answer": "Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete. One, with a melody that would have suited the Carter Family, captured the moment in a breakup when the thought of freedom balances a sense of loss. In that song, and throughout the set, she was open yet composed, never pushing or overplaying the music; she let the songs speak for themselves. With its quiet purity, the music held the club audience rapt.", "sentence_answer": "One, with a melody that would have suited the Carter Family, captured the moment in a breakup when the thought of freedom balances a sense of loss."} +{"question": "What did Joan Shelley let her songs do?", "paragraph": "Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete. One, with a melody that would have suited the Carter Family, captured the moment in a breakup when the thought of freedom balances a sense of loss. In that song, and throughout the set, she was open yet composed, never pushing or overplaying the music; she let the songs speak for themselves. With its quiet purity, the music held the club audience rapt.", "answer": "she let the songs speak for themselves", "sentence": "In that song, and throughout the set, she was open yet composed, never pushing or overplaying the music; she let the songs speak for themselves .", "paragraph_sentence": "Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete. One, with a melody that would have suited the Carter Family, captured the moment in a breakup when the thought of freedom balances a sense of loss. In that song, and throughout the set, she was open yet composed, never pushing or overplaying the music; she let the songs speak for themselves . With its quiet purity, the music held the club audience rapt.", "paragraph_answer": "Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete. One, with a melody that would have suited the Carter Family, captured the moment in a breakup when the thought of freedom balances a sense of loss. In that song, and throughout the set, she was open yet composed, never pushing or overplaying the music; she let the songs speak for themselves . With its quiet purity, the music held the club audience rapt.", "sentence_answer": "In that song, and throughout the set, she was open yet composed, never pushing or overplaying the music; she let the songs speak for themselves ."} +{"question": "What is the name of Joan Shelley's last album?", "paragraph": "Although \u201cElectric Ursa\u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete. One, with a melody that would have suited the Carter Family, captured the moment in a breakup when the thought of freedom balances a sense of loss. In that song, and throughout the set, she was open yet composed, never pushing or overplaying the music; she let the songs speak for themselves. With its quiet purity, the music held the club audience rapt.", "answer": "Electric Ursa", "sentence": "Although \u201c Electric Ursa \u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete.", "paragraph_sentence": " Although \u201c Electric Ursa \u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete. One, with a melody that would have suited the Carter Family, captured the moment in a breakup when the thought of freedom balances a sense of loss. In that song, and throughout the set, she was open yet composed, never pushing or overplaying the music; she let the songs speak for themselves. With its quiet purity, the music held the club audience rapt.", "paragraph_answer": "Although \u201c Electric Ursa \u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete. One, with a melody that would have suited the Carter Family, captured the moment in a breakup when the thought of freedom balances a sense of loss. In that song, and throughout the set, she was open yet composed, never pushing or overplaying the music; she let the songs speak for themselves. With its quiet purity, the music held the club audience rapt.", "sentence_answer": "Although \u201c Electric Ursa \u201d was released just last September, Ms. Shelley devoted much of her set to new songs that were no less resonant and, perhaps, a little more concrete."} +{"question": "What needs to happen for today's consumers get better healthcare?", "paragraph": "To the Editor: Dr. Jessica Nutik Zitter\u2019s Feb. 8 Sunday Review essay, \u201cPatient Autonomy Gone Wrong\u201d (\u201cThe End\u201d series) presents a real-life case showing just some of the problems with paper-based advance directives, especially during the critical decision-making moments in the emergency room. Today\u2019s consumers deserve better care, and to provide it, directives need to be created, updated, accessible and incorporated into treatment. Consumers should do the first two parts so doctors can do the second two parts. \u201cVincent\u201d wrote a directive, but as Dr. Zitter acknowledges, since it hadn\u2019t been updated in 10 years, there was concern about its relevancy. A simple \u201cyes, these are still my thoughts\u201d comment could have been helpful. If Vincent had included video messages or identified agents who could speak on his behalf, doctors might have been able to better understand and incorporate his goals. Far too often, directives are filed away in a drawer. They don\u2019t get updated, and they are hard to find in a crisis. To truly deliver care in accordance with a person\u2019s wishes, one\u2019s voice should be heard. If the person can\u2019t communicate clearly during the health crisis, an updated, digitally accessible advance medical directive is the next best thing.", "answer": "directives need to be created, updated, accessible and incorporated into treatment", "sentence": "Today\u2019s consumers deserve better care, and to provide it, directives need to be created, updated, accessible and incorporated into treatment .", "paragraph_sentence": "To the Editor: Dr. Jessica Nutik Zitter\u2019s Feb. 8 Sunday Review essay, \u201cPatient Autonomy Gone Wrong\u201d (\u201cThe End\u201d series) presents a real-life case showing just some of the problems with paper-based advance directives, especially during the critical decision-making moments in the emergency room. Today\u2019s consumers deserve better care, and to provide it, directives need to be created, updated, accessible and incorporated into treatment . Consumers should do the first two parts so doctors can do the second two parts. \u201cVincent\u201d wrote a directive, but as Dr. Zitter acknowledges, since it hadn\u2019t been updated in 10 years, there was concern about its relevancy. A simple \u201cyes, these are still my thoughts\u201d comment could have been helpful. If Vincent had included video messages or identified agents who could speak on his behalf, doctors might have been able to better understand and incorporate his goals. Far too often, directives are filed away in a drawer. They don\u2019t get updated, and they are hard to find in a crisis. To truly deliver care in accordance with a person\u2019s wishes, one\u2019s voice should be heard. If the person can\u2019t communicate clearly during the health crisis, an updated, digitally accessible advance medical directive is the next best thing.", "paragraph_answer": "To the Editor: Dr. Jessica Nutik Zitter\u2019s Feb. 8 Sunday Review essay, \u201cPatient Autonomy Gone Wrong\u201d (\u201cThe End\u201d series) presents a real-life case showing just some of the problems with paper-based advance directives, especially during the critical decision-making moments in the emergency room. Today\u2019s consumers deserve better care, and to provide it, directives need to be created, updated, accessible and incorporated into treatment . Consumers should do the first two parts so doctors can do the second two parts. \u201cVincent\u201d wrote a directive, but as Dr. Zitter acknowledges, since it hadn\u2019t been updated in 10 years, there was concern about its relevancy. A simple \u201cyes, these are still my thoughts\u201d comment could have been helpful. If Vincent had included video messages or identified agents who could speak on his behalf, doctors might have been able to better understand and incorporate his goals. Far too often, directives are filed away in a drawer. They don\u2019t get updated, and they are hard to find in a crisis. To truly deliver care in accordance with a person\u2019s wishes, one\u2019s voice should be heard. If the person can\u2019t communicate clearly during the health crisis, an updated, digitally accessible advance medical directive is the next best thing.", "sentence_answer": "Today\u2019s consumers deserve better care, and to provide it, directives need to be created, updated, accessible and incorporated into treatment ."} +{"question": "What was the concern about the directive put forward by Vincent", "paragraph": "To the Editor: Dr. Jessica Nutik Zitter\u2019s Feb. 8 Sunday Review essay, \u201cPatient Autonomy Gone Wrong\u201d (\u201cThe End\u201d series) presents a real-life case showing just some of the problems with paper-based advance directives, especially during the critical decision-making moments in the emergency room. Today\u2019s consumers deserve better care, and to provide it, directives need to be created, updated, accessible and incorporated into treatment. Consumers should do the first two parts so doctors can do the second two parts. \u201cVincent\u201d wrote a directive, but as Dr. Zitter acknowledges, since it hadn\u2019t been updated in 10 years, there was concern about its relevancy. A simple \u201cyes, these are still my thoughts\u201d comment could have been helpful. If Vincent had included video messages or identified agents who could speak on his behalf, doctors might have been able to better understand and incorporate his goals. Far too often, directives are filed away in a drawer. They don\u2019t get updated, and they are hard to find in a crisis. To truly deliver care in accordance with a person\u2019s wishes, one\u2019s voice should be heard. If the person can\u2019t communicate clearly during the health crisis, an updated, digitally accessible advance medical directive is the next best thing.", "answer": "its relevancy", "sentence": "\u201cVincent\u201d wrote a directive, but as Dr. Zitter acknowledges, since it hadn\u2019t been updated in 10 years, there was concern about its relevancy .", "paragraph_sentence": "To the Editor: Dr. Jessica Nutik Zitter\u2019s Feb. 8 Sunday Review essay, \u201cPatient Autonomy Gone Wrong\u201d (\u201cThe End\u201d series) presents a real-life case showing just some of the problems with paper-based advance directives, especially during the critical decision-making moments in the emergency room. Today\u2019s consumers deserve better care, and to provide it, directives need to be created, updated, accessible and incorporated into treatment. Consumers should do the first two parts so doctors can do the second two parts. \u201cVincent\u201d wrote a directive, but as Dr. Zitter acknowledges, since it hadn\u2019t been updated in 10 years, there was concern about its relevancy . A simple \u201cyes, these are still my thoughts\u201d comment could have been helpful. If Vincent had included video messages or identified agents who could speak on his behalf, doctors might have been able to better understand and incorporate his goals. Far too often, directives are filed away in a drawer. They don\u2019t get updated, and they are hard to find in a crisis. To truly deliver care in accordance with a person\u2019s wishes, one\u2019s voice should be heard. If the person can\u2019t communicate clearly during the health crisis, an updated, digitally accessible advance medical directive is the next best thing.", "paragraph_answer": "To the Editor: Dr. Jessica Nutik Zitter\u2019s Feb. 8 Sunday Review essay, \u201cPatient Autonomy Gone Wrong\u201d (\u201cThe End\u201d series) presents a real-life case showing just some of the problems with paper-based advance directives, especially during the critical decision-making moments in the emergency room. Today\u2019s consumers deserve better care, and to provide it, directives need to be created, updated, accessible and incorporated into treatment. Consumers should do the first two parts so doctors can do the second two parts. \u201cVincent\u201d wrote a directive, but as Dr. Zitter acknowledges, since it hadn\u2019t been updated in 10 years, there was concern about its relevancy . A simple \u201cyes, these are still my thoughts\u201d comment could have been helpful. If Vincent had included video messages or identified agents who could speak on his behalf, doctors might have been able to better understand and incorporate his goals. Far too often, directives are filed away in a drawer. They don\u2019t get updated, and they are hard to find in a crisis. To truly deliver care in accordance with a person\u2019s wishes, one\u2019s voice should be heard. If the person can\u2019t communicate clearly during the health crisis, an updated, digitally accessible advance medical directive is the next best thing.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cVincent\u201d wrote a directive, but as Dr. Zitter acknowledges, since it hadn\u2019t been updated in 10 years, there was concern about its relevancy ."} +{"question": "How long did the directive by Vincent go without being updated?", "paragraph": "To the Editor: Dr. Jessica Nutik Zitter\u2019s Feb. 8 Sunday Review essay, \u201cPatient Autonomy Gone Wrong\u201d (\u201cThe End\u201d series) presents a real-life case showing just some of the problems with paper-based advance directives, especially during the critical decision-making moments in the emergency room. Today\u2019s consumers deserve better care, and to provide it, directives need to be created, updated, accessible and incorporated into treatment. Consumers should do the first two parts so doctors can do the second two parts. \u201cVincent\u201d wrote a directive, but as Dr. Zitter acknowledges, since it hadn\u2019t been updated in 10 years, there was concern about its relevancy. A simple \u201cyes, these are still my thoughts\u201d comment could have been helpful. If Vincent had included video messages or identified agents who could speak on his behalf, doctors might have been able to better understand and incorporate his goals. Far too often, directives are filed away in a drawer. They don\u2019t get updated, and they are hard to find in a crisis. To truly deliver care in accordance with a person\u2019s wishes, one\u2019s voice should be heard. If the person can\u2019t communicate clearly during the health crisis, an updated, digitally accessible advance medical directive is the next best thing.", "answer": "10 years", "sentence": "\u201cVincent\u201d wrote a directive, but as Dr. Zitter acknowledges, since it hadn\u2019t been updated in 10 years , there was concern about its relevancy.", "paragraph_sentence": "To the Editor: Dr. Jessica Nutik Zitter\u2019s Feb. 8 Sunday Review essay, \u201cPatient Autonomy Gone Wrong\u201d (\u201cThe End\u201d series) presents a real-life case showing just some of the problems with paper-based advance directives, especially during the critical decision-making moments in the emergency room. Today\u2019s consumers deserve better care, and to provide it, directives need to be created, updated, accessible and incorporated into treatment. Consumers should do the first two parts so doctors can do the second two parts. \u201cVincent\u201d wrote a directive, but as Dr. Zitter acknowledges, since it hadn\u2019t been updated in 10 years , there was concern about its relevancy. A simple \u201cyes, these are still my thoughts\u201d comment could have been helpful. If Vincent had included video messages or identified agents who could speak on his behalf, doctors might have been able to better understand and incorporate his goals. Far too often, directives are filed away in a drawer. They don\u2019t get updated, and they are hard to find in a crisis. To truly deliver care in accordance with a person\u2019s wishes, one\u2019s voice should be heard. If the person can\u2019t communicate clearly during the health crisis, an updated, digitally accessible advance medical directive is the next best thing.", "paragraph_answer": "To the Editor: Dr. Jessica Nutik Zitter\u2019s Feb. 8 Sunday Review essay, \u201cPatient Autonomy Gone Wrong\u201d (\u201cThe End\u201d series) presents a real-life case showing just some of the problems with paper-based advance directives, especially during the critical decision-making moments in the emergency room. Today\u2019s consumers deserve better care, and to provide it, directives need to be created, updated, accessible and incorporated into treatment. Consumers should do the first two parts so doctors can do the second two parts. \u201cVincent\u201d wrote a directive, but as Dr. Zitter acknowledges, since it hadn\u2019t been updated in 10 years , there was concern about its relevancy. A simple \u201cyes, these are still my thoughts\u201d comment could have been helpful. If Vincent had included video messages or identified agents who could speak on his behalf, doctors might have been able to better understand and incorporate his goals. Far too often, directives are filed away in a drawer. They don\u2019t get updated, and they are hard to find in a crisis. To truly deliver care in accordance with a person\u2019s wishes, one\u2019s voice should be heard. If the person can\u2019t communicate clearly during the health crisis, an updated, digitally accessible advance medical directive is the next best thing.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cVincent\u201d wrote a directive, but as Dr. Zitter acknowledges, since it hadn\u2019t been updated in 10 years , there was concern about its relevancy."} +{"question": "What could Vincent have included with his directive to help doctors better understand and incorporate his goals?", "paragraph": "To the Editor: Dr. Jessica Nutik Zitter\u2019s Feb. 8 Sunday Review essay, \u201cPatient Autonomy Gone Wrong\u201d (\u201cThe End\u201d series) presents a real-life case showing just some of the problems with paper-based advance directives, especially during the critical decision-making moments in the emergency room. Today\u2019s consumers deserve better care, and to provide it, directives need to be created, updated, accessible and incorporated into treatment. Consumers should do the first two parts so doctors can do the second two parts. \u201cVincent\u201d wrote a directive, but as Dr. Zitter acknowledges, since it hadn\u2019t been updated in 10 years, there was concern about its relevancy. A simple \u201cyes, these are still my thoughts\u201d comment could have been helpful. If Vincent had included video messages or identified agents who could speak on his behalf, doctors might have been able to better understand and incorporate his goals. Far too often, directives are filed away in a drawer. They don\u2019t get updated, and they are hard to find in a crisis. To truly deliver care in accordance with a person\u2019s wishes, one\u2019s voice should be heard. If the person can\u2019t communicate clearly during the health crisis, an updated, digitally accessible advance medical directive is the next best thing.", "answer": "included video messages or identified agents who could speak on his behalf", "sentence": "If Vincent had included video messages or identified agents who could speak on his behalf , doctors might have been able to better understand and incorporate his goals.", "paragraph_sentence": "To the Editor: Dr. Jessica Nutik Zitter\u2019s Feb. 8 Sunday Review essay, \u201cPatient Autonomy Gone Wrong\u201d (\u201cThe End\u201d series) presents a real-life case showing just some of the problems with paper-based advance directives, especially during the critical decision-making moments in the emergency room. Today\u2019s consumers deserve better care, and to provide it, directives need to be created, updated, accessible and incorporated into treatment. Consumers should do the first two parts so doctors can do the second two parts. \u201cVincent\u201d wrote a directive, but as Dr. Zitter acknowledges, since it hadn\u2019t been updated in 10 years, there was concern about its relevancy. A simple \u201cyes, these are still my thoughts\u201d comment could have been helpful. If Vincent had included video messages or identified agents who could speak on his behalf , doctors might have been able to better understand and incorporate his goals. Far too often, directives are filed away in a drawer. They don\u2019t get updated, and they are hard to find in a crisis. To truly deliver care in accordance with a person\u2019s wishes, one\u2019s voice should be heard. If the person can\u2019t communicate clearly during the health crisis, an updated, digitally accessible advance medical directive is the next best thing.", "paragraph_answer": "To the Editor: Dr. Jessica Nutik Zitter\u2019s Feb. 8 Sunday Review essay, \u201cPatient Autonomy Gone Wrong\u201d (\u201cThe End\u201d series) presents a real-life case showing just some of the problems with paper-based advance directives, especially during the critical decision-making moments in the emergency room. Today\u2019s consumers deserve better care, and to provide it, directives need to be created, updated, accessible and incorporated into treatment. Consumers should do the first two parts so doctors can do the second two parts. \u201cVincent\u201d wrote a directive, but as Dr. Zitter acknowledges, since it hadn\u2019t been updated in 10 years, there was concern about its relevancy. A simple \u201cyes, these are still my thoughts\u201d comment could have been helpful. If Vincent had included video messages or identified agents who could speak on his behalf , doctors might have been able to better understand and incorporate his goals. Far too often, directives are filed away in a drawer. They don\u2019t get updated, and they are hard to find in a crisis. To truly deliver care in accordance with a person\u2019s wishes, one\u2019s voice should be heard. If the person can\u2019t communicate clearly during the health crisis, an updated, digitally accessible advance medical directive is the next best thing.", "sentence_answer": "If Vincent had included video messages or identified agents who could speak on his behalf , doctors might have been able to better understand and incorporate his goals."} +{"question": "What is the next best thing to a person communicating their wishes for care?", "paragraph": "To the Editor: Dr. Jessica Nutik Zitter\u2019s Feb. 8 Sunday Review essay, \u201cPatient Autonomy Gone Wrong\u201d (\u201cThe End\u201d series) presents a real-life case showing just some of the problems with paper-based advance directives, especially during the critical decision-making moments in the emergency room. Today\u2019s consumers deserve better care, and to provide it, directives need to be created, updated, accessible and incorporated into treatment. Consumers should do the first two parts so doctors can do the second two parts. \u201cVincent\u201d wrote a directive, but as Dr. Zitter acknowledges, since it hadn\u2019t been updated in 10 years, there was concern about its relevancy. A simple \u201cyes, these are still my thoughts\u201d comment could have been helpful. If Vincent had included video messages or identified agents who could speak on his behalf, doctors might have been able to better understand and incorporate his goals. Far too often, directives are filed away in a drawer. They don\u2019t get updated, and they are hard to find in a crisis. To truly deliver care in accordance with a person\u2019s wishes, one\u2019s voice should be heard. If the person can\u2019t communicate clearly during the health crisis, an updated, digitally accessible advance medical directive is the next best thing.", "answer": "an updated, digitally accessible advance medical directive", "sentence": "If the person can\u2019t communicate clearly during the health crisis, an updated, digitally accessible advance medical directive is the next best thing.", "paragraph_sentence": "To the Editor: Dr. Jessica Nutik Zitter\u2019s Feb. 8 Sunday Review essay, \u201cPatient Autonomy Gone Wrong\u201d (\u201cThe End\u201d series) presents a real-life case showing just some of the problems with paper-based advance directives, especially during the critical decision-making moments in the emergency room. Today\u2019s consumers deserve better care, and to provide it, directives need to be created, updated, accessible and incorporated into treatment. Consumers should do the first two parts so doctors can do the second two parts. \u201cVincent\u201d wrote a directive, but as Dr. Zitter acknowledges, since it hadn\u2019t been updated in 10 years, there was concern about its relevancy. A simple \u201cyes, these are still my thoughts\u201d comment could have been helpful. If Vincent had included video messages or identified agents who could speak on his behalf, doctors might have been able to better understand and incorporate his goals. Far too often, directives are filed away in a drawer. They don\u2019t get updated, and they are hard to find in a crisis. To truly deliver care in accordance with a person\u2019s wishes, one\u2019s voice should be heard. If the person can\u2019t communicate clearly during the health crisis, an updated, digitally accessible advance medical directive is the next best thing. ", "paragraph_answer": "To the Editor: Dr. Jessica Nutik Zitter\u2019s Feb. 8 Sunday Review essay, \u201cPatient Autonomy Gone Wrong\u201d (\u201cThe End\u201d series) presents a real-life case showing just some of the problems with paper-based advance directives, especially during the critical decision-making moments in the emergency room. Today\u2019s consumers deserve better care, and to provide it, directives need to be created, updated, accessible and incorporated into treatment. Consumers should do the first two parts so doctors can do the second two parts. \u201cVincent\u201d wrote a directive, but as Dr. Zitter acknowledges, since it hadn\u2019t been updated in 10 years, there was concern about its relevancy. A simple \u201cyes, these are still my thoughts\u201d comment could have been helpful. If Vincent had included video messages or identified agents who could speak on his behalf, doctors might have been able to better understand and incorporate his goals. Far too often, directives are filed away in a drawer. They don\u2019t get updated, and they are hard to find in a crisis. To truly deliver care in accordance with a person\u2019s wishes, one\u2019s voice should be heard. If the person can\u2019t communicate clearly during the health crisis, an updated, digitally accessible advance medical directive is the next best thing.", "sentence_answer": "If the person can\u2019t communicate clearly during the health crisis, an updated, digitally accessible advance medical directive is the next best thing."} +{"question": "Where did Security forces disrupt a \"large-scale attack\"?", "paragraph": "Security forces disrupted what was described as a \u201clarge-scale attack\u201d in Burkina Faso, arresting 13 suspects and seizing weapons and bomb-making materials in the west near Mali\u2019s border, the security minister said Friday. News of the arrests comes two days before the West African nation holds elections, capping a turbulent period that began with a popular uprising in October 2014 and a brief, failed coup in September. Burkina Faso has set up checkpoints at the entrances to cities and plans to close its borders for Sunday\u2019s voting.", "answer": "Burkina Faso", "sentence": "Security forces disrupted what was described as a \u201clarge-scale attack\u201d in Burkina Faso , arresting 13 suspects and seizing weapons and bomb-making materials in the west near Mali\u2019s border, the security minister said Friday.", "paragraph_sentence": " Security forces disrupted what was described as a \u201clarge-scale attack\u201d in Burkina Faso , arresting 13 suspects and seizing weapons and bomb-making materials in the west near Mali\u2019s border, the security minister said Friday. News of the arrests comes two days before the West African nation holds elections, capping a turbulent period that began with a popular uprising in October 2014 and a brief, failed coup in September. Burkina Faso has set up checkpoints at the entrances to cities and plans to close its borders for Sunday\u2019s voting.", "paragraph_answer": "Security forces disrupted what was described as a \u201clarge-scale attack\u201d in Burkina Faso , arresting 13 suspects and seizing weapons and bomb-making materials in the west near Mali\u2019s border, the security minister said Friday. News of the arrests comes two days before the West African nation holds elections, capping a turbulent period that began with a popular uprising in October 2014 and a brief, failed coup in September. Burkina Faso has set up checkpoints at the entrances to cities and plans to close its borders for Sunday\u2019s voting.", "sentence_answer": "Security forces disrupted what was described as a \u201clarge-scale attack\u201d in Burkina Faso , arresting 13 suspects and seizing weapons and bomb-making materials in the west near Mali\u2019s border, the security minister said Friday."} +{"question": "How many suspects were arrested in the west near Mali's border?", "paragraph": "Security forces disrupted what was described as a \u201clarge-scale attack\u201d in Burkina Faso, arresting 13 suspects and seizing weapons and bomb-making materials in the west near Mali\u2019s border, the security minister said Friday. News of the arrests comes two days before the West African nation holds elections, capping a turbulent period that began with a popular uprising in October 2014 and a brief, failed coup in September. Burkina Faso has set up checkpoints at the entrances to cities and plans to close its borders for Sunday\u2019s voting.", "answer": "13", "sentence": "Security forces disrupted what was described as a \u201clarge-scale attack\u201d in Burkina Faso, arresting 13 suspects and seizing weapons and bomb-making materials in the west near Mali\u2019s border, the security minister said Friday.", "paragraph_sentence": " Security forces disrupted what was described as a \u201clarge-scale attack\u201d in Burkina Faso, arresting 13 suspects and seizing weapons and bomb-making materials in the west near Mali\u2019s border, the security minister said Friday. News of the arrests comes two days before the West African nation holds elections, capping a turbulent period that began with a popular uprising in October 2014 and a brief, failed coup in September. Burkina Faso has set up checkpoints at the entrances to cities and plans to close its borders for Sunday\u2019s voting.", "paragraph_answer": "Security forces disrupted what was described as a \u201clarge-scale attack\u201d in Burkina Faso, arresting 13 suspects and seizing weapons and bomb-making materials in the west near Mali\u2019s border, the security minister said Friday. News of the arrests comes two days before the West African nation holds elections, capping a turbulent period that began with a popular uprising in October 2014 and a brief, failed coup in September. Burkina Faso has set up checkpoints at the entrances to cities and plans to close its borders for Sunday\u2019s voting.", "sentence_answer": "Security forces disrupted what was described as a \u201clarge-scale attack\u201d in Burkina Faso, arresting 13 suspects and seizing weapons and bomb-making materials in the west near Mali\u2019s border, the security minister said Friday."} +{"question": "How many days before the West African nation holds elections does news of the arrests come?", "paragraph": "Security forces disrupted what was described as a \u201clarge-scale attack\u201d in Burkina Faso, arresting 13 suspects and seizing weapons and bomb-making materials in the west near Mali\u2019s border, the security minister said Friday. News of the arrests comes two days before the West African nation holds elections, capping a turbulent period that began with a popular uprising in October 2014 and a brief, failed coup in September. Burkina Faso has set up checkpoints at the entrances to cities and plans to close its borders for Sunday\u2019s voting.", "answer": "two", "sentence": "News of the arrests comes two days before the West African nation holds elections, capping a turbulent period that began with a popular uprising in October 2014 and a brief, failed coup in September.", "paragraph_sentence": "Security forces disrupted what was described as a \u201clarge-scale attack\u201d in Burkina Faso, arresting 13 suspects and seizing weapons and bomb-making materials in the west near Mali\u2019s border, the security minister said Friday. News of the arrests comes two days before the West African nation holds elections, capping a turbulent period that began with a popular uprising in October 2014 and a brief, failed coup in September. Burkina Faso has set up checkpoints at the entrances to cities and plans to close its borders for Sunday\u2019s voting.", "paragraph_answer": "Security forces disrupted what was described as a \u201clarge-scale attack\u201d in Burkina Faso, arresting 13 suspects and seizing weapons and bomb-making materials in the west near Mali\u2019s border, the security minister said Friday. News of the arrests comes two days before the West African nation holds elections, capping a turbulent period that began with a popular uprising in October 2014 and a brief, failed coup in September. Burkina Faso has set up checkpoints at the entrances to cities and plans to close its borders for Sunday\u2019s voting.", "sentence_answer": "News of the arrests comes two days before the West African nation holds elections, capping a turbulent period that began with a popular uprising in October 2014 and a brief, failed coup in September."} +{"question": "When did a popular uprising occur which caused a turbulent period to begin?", "paragraph": "Security forces disrupted what was described as a \u201clarge-scale attack\u201d in Burkina Faso, arresting 13 suspects and seizing weapons and bomb-making materials in the west near Mali\u2019s border, the security minister said Friday. News of the arrests comes two days before the West African nation holds elections, capping a turbulent period that began with a popular uprising in October 2014 and a brief, failed coup in September. Burkina Faso has set up checkpoints at the entrances to cities and plans to close its borders for Sunday\u2019s voting.", "answer": "October 2014", "sentence": "News of the arrests comes two days before the West African nation holds elections, capping a turbulent period that began with a popular uprising in October 2014 and a brief, failed coup in September.", "paragraph_sentence": "Security forces disrupted what was described as a \u201clarge-scale attack\u201d in Burkina Faso, arresting 13 suspects and seizing weapons and bomb-making materials in the west near Mali\u2019s border, the security minister said Friday. News of the arrests comes two days before the West African nation holds elections, capping a turbulent period that began with a popular uprising in October 2014 and a brief, failed coup in September. Burkina Faso has set up checkpoints at the entrances to cities and plans to close its borders for Sunday\u2019s voting.", "paragraph_answer": "Security forces disrupted what was described as a \u201clarge-scale attack\u201d in Burkina Faso, arresting 13 suspects and seizing weapons and bomb-making materials in the west near Mali\u2019s border, the security minister said Friday. News of the arrests comes two days before the West African nation holds elections, capping a turbulent period that began with a popular uprising in October 2014 and a brief, failed coup in September. Burkina Faso has set up checkpoints at the entrances to cities and plans to close its borders for Sunday\u2019s voting.", "sentence_answer": "News of the arrests comes two days before the West African nation holds elections, capping a turbulent period that began with a popular uprising in October 2014 and a brief, failed coup in September."} +{"question": "What has Burkina Faso set up at the entrances of cities for Sunday's voting?", "paragraph": "Security forces disrupted what was described as a \u201clarge-scale attack\u201d in Burkina Faso, arresting 13 suspects and seizing weapons and bomb-making materials in the west near Mali\u2019s border, the security minister said Friday. News of the arrests comes two days before the West African nation holds elections, capping a turbulent period that began with a popular uprising in October 2014 and a brief, failed coup in September. Burkina Faso has set up checkpoints at the entrances to cities and plans to close its borders for Sunday\u2019s voting.", "answer": "checkpoints", "sentence": "Burkina Faso has set up checkpoints at the entrances to cities and plans to close its borders for Sunday\u2019s voting.", "paragraph_sentence": "Security forces disrupted what was described as a \u201clarge-scale attack\u201d in Burkina Faso, arresting 13 suspects and seizing weapons and bomb-making materials in the west near Mali\u2019s border, the security minister said Friday. News of the arrests comes two days before the West African nation holds elections, capping a turbulent period that began with a popular uprising in October 2014 and a brief, failed coup in September. Burkina Faso has set up checkpoints at the entrances to cities and plans to close its borders for Sunday\u2019s voting. ", "paragraph_answer": "Security forces disrupted what was described as a \u201clarge-scale attack\u201d in Burkina Faso, arresting 13 suspects and seizing weapons and bomb-making materials in the west near Mali\u2019s border, the security minister said Friday. News of the arrests comes two days before the West African nation holds elections, capping a turbulent period that began with a popular uprising in October 2014 and a brief, failed coup in September. Burkina Faso has set up checkpoints at the entrances to cities and plans to close its borders for Sunday\u2019s voting.", "sentence_answer": "Burkina Faso has set up checkpoints at the entrances to cities and plans to close its borders for Sunday\u2019s voting."} +{"question": "Who is the director of the American Tap Dance Foundation?", "paragraph": "This week, Tony Waag, the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15th year. On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201cStrayhorn Medley.\u201d Several \u201cTap Forward\u201d offerings, despite the progressive-sounding title, ran toward the conservative. When Mr. Waag\u2019s lineup did step out of the box, as with \u201cShiva\u2019s Dance Yoga,\u201d a kathak performance by Rachna Nivas, who sang, played the finger symbols and danced, the inclusion felt random \u2014 it wasn\u2019t tap \u2014 and her execution uneven. There were musical theater numbers with pasted-on smiles, and a sand dance in Susan Hebach\u2019s \u201cNica\u2019s Dream,\u201d in which performers shuffle their feet on grains of sand. Here, three sand dancers were accompanied by four tap dancers; but they needed more variety, not backup dancers.", "answer": "Tony Waag", "sentence": "This week, Tony Waag , the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15th year.", "paragraph_sentence": " This week, Tony Waag , the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15th year. On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201cStrayhorn Medley.\u201d Several \u201cTap Forward\u201d offerings, despite the progressive-sounding title, ran toward the conservative. When Mr. Waag\u2019s lineup did step out of the box, as with \u201cShiva\u2019s Dance Yoga,\u201d a kathak performance by Rachna Nivas, who sang, played the finger symbols and danced, the inclusion felt random \u2014 it wasn\u2019t tap \u2014 and her execution uneven. There were musical theater numbers with pasted-on smiles, and a sand dance in Susan Hebach\u2019s \u201cNica\u2019s Dream,\u201d in which performers shuffle their feet on grains of sand. Here, three sand dancers were accompanied by four tap dancers; but they needed more variety, not backup dancers.", "paragraph_answer": "This week, Tony Waag , the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15th year. On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201cStrayhorn Medley.\u201d Several \u201cTap Forward\u201d offerings, despite the progressive-sounding title, ran toward the conservative. When Mr. Waag\u2019s lineup did step out of the box, as with \u201cShiva\u2019s Dance Yoga,\u201d a kathak performance by Rachna Nivas, who sang, played the finger symbols and danced, the inclusion felt random \u2014 it wasn\u2019t tap \u2014 and her execution uneven. There were musical theater numbers with pasted-on smiles, and a sand dance in Susan Hebach\u2019s \u201cNica\u2019s Dream,\u201d in which performers shuffle their feet on grains of sand. Here, three sand dancers were accompanied by four tap dancers; but they needed more variety, not backup dancers.", "sentence_answer": "This week, Tony Waag , the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15th year."} +{"question": "How long many years has the Tap City festival gone on?", "paragraph": "This week, Tony Waag, the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15th year. On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201cStrayhorn Medley.\u201d Several \u201cTap Forward\u201d offerings, despite the progressive-sounding title, ran toward the conservative. When Mr. Waag\u2019s lineup did step out of the box, as with \u201cShiva\u2019s Dance Yoga,\u201d a kathak performance by Rachna Nivas, who sang, played the finger symbols and danced, the inclusion felt random \u2014 it wasn\u2019t tap \u2014 and her execution uneven. There were musical theater numbers with pasted-on smiles, and a sand dance in Susan Hebach\u2019s \u201cNica\u2019s Dream,\u201d in which performers shuffle their feet on grains of sand. Here, three sand dancers were accompanied by four tap dancers; but they needed more variety, not backup dancers.", "answer": "15", "sentence": "This week, Tony Waag, the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15 th year.", "paragraph_sentence": " This week, Tony Waag, the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15 th year. On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201cStrayhorn Medley.\u201d Several \u201cTap Forward\u201d offerings, despite the progressive-sounding title, ran toward the conservative. When Mr. Waag\u2019s lineup did step out of the box, as with \u201cShiva\u2019s Dance Yoga,\u201d a kathak performance by Rachna Nivas, who sang, played the finger symbols and danced, the inclusion felt random \u2014 it wasn\u2019t tap \u2014 and her execution uneven. There were musical theater numbers with pasted-on smiles, and a sand dance in Susan Hebach\u2019s \u201cNica\u2019s Dream,\u201d in which performers shuffle their feet on grains of sand. Here, three sand dancers were accompanied by four tap dancers; but they needed more variety, not backup dancers.", "paragraph_answer": "This week, Tony Waag, the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15 th year. On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201cStrayhorn Medley.\u201d Several \u201cTap Forward\u201d offerings, despite the progressive-sounding title, ran toward the conservative. When Mr. Waag\u2019s lineup did step out of the box, as with \u201cShiva\u2019s Dance Yoga,\u201d a kathak performance by Rachna Nivas, who sang, played the finger symbols and danced, the inclusion felt random \u2014 it wasn\u2019t tap \u2014 and her execution uneven. There were musical theater numbers with pasted-on smiles, and a sand dance in Susan Hebach\u2019s \u201cNica\u2019s Dream,\u201d in which performers shuffle their feet on grains of sand. Here, three sand dancers were accompanied by four tap dancers; but they needed more variety, not backup dancers.", "sentence_answer": "This week, Tony Waag, the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15 th year."} +{"question": "Who showed off a polished finish?", "paragraph": "This week, Tony Waag, the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15th year. On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201cStrayhorn Medley.\u201d Several \u201cTap Forward\u201d offerings, despite the progressive-sounding title, ran toward the conservative. When Mr. Waag\u2019s lineup did step out of the box, as with \u201cShiva\u2019s Dance Yoga,\u201d a kathak performance by Rachna Nivas, who sang, played the finger symbols and danced, the inclusion felt random \u2014 it wasn\u2019t tap \u2014 and her execution uneven. There were musical theater numbers with pasted-on smiles, and a sand dance in Susan Hebach\u2019s \u201cNica\u2019s Dream,\u201d in which performers shuffle their feet on grains of sand. Here, three sand dancers were accompanied by four tap dancers; but they needed more variety, not backup dancers.", "answer": "Brenda Bufalino", "sentence": "On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201cStrayhorn Medley.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "This week, Tony Waag, the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15th year. On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201cStrayhorn Medley.\u201d Several \u201cTap Forward\u201d offerings, despite the progressive-sounding title, ran toward the conservative. When Mr. Waag\u2019s lineup did step out of the box, as with \u201cShiva\u2019s Dance Yoga,\u201d a kathak performance by Rachna Nivas, who sang, played the finger symbols and danced, the inclusion felt random \u2014 it wasn\u2019t tap \u2014 and her execution uneven. There were musical theater numbers with pasted-on smiles, and a sand dance in Susan Hebach\u2019s \u201cNica\u2019s Dream,\u201d in which performers shuffle their feet on grains of sand. Here, three sand dancers were accompanied by four tap dancers; but they needed more variety, not backup dancers.", "paragraph_answer": "This week, Tony Waag, the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15th year. On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201cStrayhorn Medley.\u201d Several \u201cTap Forward\u201d offerings, despite the progressive-sounding title, ran toward the conservative. When Mr. Waag\u2019s lineup did step out of the box, as with \u201cShiva\u2019s Dance Yoga,\u201d a kathak performance by Rachna Nivas, who sang, played the finger symbols and danced, the inclusion felt random \u2014 it wasn\u2019t tap \u2014 and her execution uneven. There were musical theater numbers with pasted-on smiles, and a sand dance in Susan Hebach\u2019s \u201cNica\u2019s Dream,\u201d in which performers shuffle their feet on grains of sand. Here, three sand dancers were accompanied by four tap dancers; but they needed more variety, not backup dancers.", "sentence_answer": "On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201cStrayhorn Medley.\u201d"} +{"question": "What did Brenda Bufalino dance to?", "paragraph": "This week, Tony Waag, the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15th year. On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201cStrayhorn Medley.\u201d Several \u201cTap Forward\u201d offerings, despite the progressive-sounding title, ran toward the conservative. When Mr. Waag\u2019s lineup did step out of the box, as with \u201cShiva\u2019s Dance Yoga,\u201d a kathak performance by Rachna Nivas, who sang, played the finger symbols and danced, the inclusion felt random \u2014 it wasn\u2019t tap \u2014 and her execution uneven. There were musical theater numbers with pasted-on smiles, and a sand dance in Susan Hebach\u2019s \u201cNica\u2019s Dream,\u201d in which performers shuffle their feet on grains of sand. Here, three sand dancers were accompanied by four tap dancers; but they needed more variety, not backup dancers.", "answer": "Strayhorn Medley.", "sentence": "On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201c Strayhorn Medley. \u201d Several \u201cTap Forward\u201d offerings, despite the progressive-sounding title, ran toward the conservative.", "paragraph_sentence": "This week, Tony Waag, the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15th year. On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201c Strayhorn Medley. \u201d Several \u201cTap Forward\u201d offerings, despite the progressive-sounding title, ran toward the conservative. When Mr. Waag\u2019s lineup did step out of the box, as with \u201cShiva\u2019s Dance Yoga,\u201d a kathak performance by Rachna Nivas, who sang, played the finger symbols and danced, the inclusion felt random \u2014 it wasn\u2019t tap \u2014 and her execution uneven. There were musical theater numbers with pasted-on smiles, and a sand dance in Susan Hebach\u2019s \u201cNica\u2019s Dream,\u201d in which performers shuffle their feet on grains of sand. Here, three sand dancers were accompanied by four tap dancers; but they needed more variety, not backup dancers.", "paragraph_answer": "This week, Tony Waag, the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15th year. On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201c Strayhorn Medley. \u201d Several \u201cTap Forward\u201d offerings, despite the progressive-sounding title, ran toward the conservative. When Mr. Waag\u2019s lineup did step out of the box, as with \u201cShiva\u2019s Dance Yoga,\u201d a kathak performance by Rachna Nivas, who sang, played the finger symbols and danced, the inclusion felt random \u2014 it wasn\u2019t tap \u2014 and her execution uneven. There were musical theater numbers with pasted-on smiles, and a sand dance in Susan Hebach\u2019s \u201cNica\u2019s Dream,\u201d in which performers shuffle their feet on grains of sand. Here, three sand dancers were accompanied by four tap dancers; but they needed more variety, not backup dancers.", "sentence_answer": "On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201c Strayhorn Medley. \u201d Several \u201cTap Forward\u201d offerings, despite the progressive-sounding title, ran toward the conservative."} +{"question": "Who played the finger symbols?", "paragraph": "This week, Tony Waag, the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15th year. On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201cStrayhorn Medley.\u201d Several \u201cTap Forward\u201d offerings, despite the progressive-sounding title, ran toward the conservative. When Mr. Waag\u2019s lineup did step out of the box, as with \u201cShiva\u2019s Dance Yoga,\u201d a kathak performance by Rachna Nivas, who sang, played the finger symbols and danced, the inclusion felt random \u2014 it wasn\u2019t tap \u2014 and her execution uneven. There were musical theater numbers with pasted-on smiles, and a sand dance in Susan Hebach\u2019s \u201cNica\u2019s Dream,\u201d in which performers shuffle their feet on grains of sand. Here, three sand dancers were accompanied by four tap dancers; but they needed more variety, not backup dancers.", "answer": "Rachna Nivas", "sentence": "When Mr. Waag\u2019s lineup did step out of the box, as with \u201cShiva\u2019s Dance Yoga,\u201d a kathak performance by Rachna Nivas , who sang, played the finger symbols and danced, the inclusion felt random \u2014 it wasn\u2019t tap \u2014 and her execution uneven.", "paragraph_sentence": "This week, Tony Waag, the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15th year. On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201cStrayhorn Medley.\u201d Several \u201cTap Forward\u201d offerings, despite the progressive-sounding title, ran toward the conservative. When Mr. Waag\u2019s lineup did step out of the box, as with \u201cShiva\u2019s Dance Yoga,\u201d a kathak performance by Rachna Nivas , who sang, played the finger symbols and danced, the inclusion felt random \u2014 it wasn\u2019t tap \u2014 and her execution uneven. There were musical theater numbers with pasted-on smiles, and a sand dance in Susan Hebach\u2019s \u201cNica\u2019s Dream,\u201d in which performers shuffle their feet on grains of sand. Here, three sand dancers were accompanied by four tap dancers; but they needed more variety, not backup dancers.", "paragraph_answer": "This week, Tony Waag, the perpetually cheerful director of the American Tap Dance Foundation, presides over Tap City, a festival now in its 15th year. On Wednesday in \u201cTap Forward,\u201d a program highlighting contemporary tappers at the intimate Duke on 42nd Street, there was even a flash from the past: The veteran Brenda Bufalino showed off her polished finish as she quietly blended in and out of a groove in \u201cStrayhorn Medley.\u201d Several \u201cTap Forward\u201d offerings, despite the progressive-sounding title, ran toward the conservative. When Mr. Waag\u2019s lineup did step out of the box, as with \u201cShiva\u2019s Dance Yoga,\u201d a kathak performance by Rachna Nivas , who sang, played the finger symbols and danced, the inclusion felt random \u2014 it wasn\u2019t tap \u2014 and her execution uneven. There were musical theater numbers with pasted-on smiles, and a sand dance in Susan Hebach\u2019s \u201cNica\u2019s Dream,\u201d in which performers shuffle their feet on grains of sand. Here, three sand dancers were accompanied by four tap dancers; but they needed more variety, not backup dancers.", "sentence_answer": "When Mr. Waag\u2019s lineup did step out of the box, as with \u201cShiva\u2019s Dance Yoga,\u201d a kathak performance by Rachna Nivas , who sang, played the finger symbols and danced, the inclusion felt random \u2014 it wasn\u2019t tap \u2014 and her execution uneven."} +{"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?"} +{"question": "Who did Celeb Teicher share the stage with?", "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": "Brittany DeStefano and Gabe Winns", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "Who does Teicher have a new angle on?", "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": "Bach", "sentence": "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", "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": "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"} +{"question": "How many excerpts from Variations were performed?", "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": "three", "sentence": "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", "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": "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"} +{"question": "What features allows voice messages on the same platform as texts?", "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": "iMessage", "sentence": "Apple\u2019s iMessage has an audio-chat feature that allows you to send voice messages to friends on the same platform as text messages.", "paragraph_sentence": " Apple\u2019s iMessage has an audio-chat feature that allows you to send voice messages to friends on the same platform as text messages. Many apps have similar features, including WhatsApp and WeChat. Then there is the actual phone, which I\u2019m told is the basis of these app-filled devices we all have. If you really want to hear someone\u2019s voice, you can simply call her.", "paragraph_answer": "Apple\u2019s iMessage has an audio-chat feature that allows you to send voice messages to friends on the same platform as text messages. Many apps have similar features, including WhatsApp and WeChat. Then there is the actual phone, which I\u2019m told is the basis of these app-filled devices we all have. If you really want to hear someone\u2019s voice, you can simply call her.", "sentence_answer": "Apple\u2019s iMessage has an audio-chat feature that allows you to send voice messages to friends on the same platform as text messages."} +{"question": "What apps have similar features?", "paragraph": "Apple\u2019s iMessage has an audio-chat feature that allows you to send voice messages to friends on the same platform as text messages. Many apps have similar features, including WhatsApp and WeChat. Then there is the actual phone, which I\u2019m told is the basis of these app-filled devices we all have. If you really want to hear someone\u2019s voice, you can simply call her.", "answer": "WhatsApp and WeChat", "sentence": "Many apps have similar features, including WhatsApp and WeChat .", "paragraph_sentence": "Apple\u2019s iMessage has an audio-chat feature that allows you to send voice messages to friends on the same platform as text messages. Many apps have similar features, including WhatsApp and WeChat . Then there is the actual phone, which I\u2019m told is the basis of these app-filled devices we all have. If you really want to hear someone\u2019s voice, you can simply call her.", "paragraph_answer": "Apple\u2019s iMessage has an audio-chat feature that allows you to send voice messages to friends on the same platform as text messages. Many apps have similar features, including WhatsApp and WeChat . Then there is the actual phone, which I\u2019m told is the basis of these app-filled devices we all have. If you really want to hear someone\u2019s voice, you can simply call her.", "sentence_answer": "Many apps have similar features, including WhatsApp and WeChat ."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What kind of feature is iMessage?", "paragraph": "Apple\u2019s iMessage has an audio-chat feature that allows you to send voice messages to friends on the same platform as text messages. Many apps have similar features, including WhatsApp and WeChat. Then there is the actual phone, which I\u2019m told is the basis of these app-filled devices we all have. If you really want to hear someone\u2019s voice, you can simply call her.", "answer": "audio-chat", "sentence": "Apple\u2019s iMessage has an audio-chat feature that allows you to send voice messages to friends on the same platform as text messages.", "paragraph_sentence": " Apple\u2019s iMessage has an audio-chat feature that allows you to send voice messages to friends on the same platform as text messages. Many apps have similar features, including WhatsApp and WeChat. Then there is the actual phone, which I\u2019m told is the basis of these app-filled devices we all have. If you really want to hear someone\u2019s voice, you can simply call her.", "paragraph_answer": "Apple\u2019s iMessage has an audio-chat feature that allows you to send voice messages to friends on the same platform as text messages. Many apps have similar features, including WhatsApp and WeChat. Then there is the actual phone, which I\u2019m told is the basis of these app-filled devices we all have. If you really want to hear someone\u2019s voice, you can simply call her.", "sentence_answer": "Apple\u2019s iMessage has an audio-chat feature that allows you to send voice messages to friends on the same platform as text messages."} +{"question": "Are voice messages sent instantaneously?", "paragraph": "You can\u2019t save messages from others, or even listen to your own before you send them. And unlike an actual walkie-talkie, you have to double-click a button in order to hear your friends\u2019 messages over the speaker. They are sent instantaneously but do not play back automatically. It doesn\u2019t sound promising, especially since young people are notoriously squirmy about leaving and receiving voice mail. And yet the app is a pleasure to use, with an intuitive design and an eye-pleasing color scheme. I have big, clumsy fingers and don\u2019t particularly like to text. With Roger, I can easily press a button, record a quick message and shoot it off to my girlfriend, who is based in Boston, when I don\u2019t have time to call. Sending voice messages is also more intimate than texting. Ricardo Vice Santos, a founder of Roger, said that given the time change, it was often difficult to call his mother in Portugal, five time zones away. Text messages seemed impersonal. Roger bridges the gap, allowing for messages that still convey real warmth. Alas, Roger has not caught on with others in my circle. My girlfriend says she uses it only to humor me. Her cousin is harsher: \u201cI just don\u2019t see the point,\u201d he said in an email, before using the app itself to tell me it was \u201cworthless.\u201d", "answer": "They are sent instantaneously", "sentence": "They are sent instantaneously but do not play back automatically.", "paragraph_sentence": "You can\u2019t save messages from others, or even listen to your own before you send them. And unlike an actual walkie-talkie, you have to double-click a button in order to hear your friends\u2019 messages over the speaker. They are sent instantaneously but do not play back automatically. It doesn\u2019t sound promising, especially since young people are notoriously squirmy about leaving and receiving voice mail. And yet the app is a pleasure to use, with an intuitive design and an eye-pleasing color scheme. I have big, clumsy fingers and don\u2019t particularly like to text. With Roger, I can easily press a button, record a quick message and shoot it off to my girlfriend, who is based in Boston, when I don\u2019t have time to call. Sending voice messages is also more intimate than texting. Ricardo Vice Santos, a founder of Roger, said that given the time change, it was often difficult to call his mother in Portugal, five time zones away. Text messages seemed impersonal. Roger bridges the gap, allowing for messages that still convey real warmth. Alas, Roger has not caught on with others in my circle. My girlfriend says she uses it only to humor me. Her cousin is harsher: \u201cI just don\u2019t see the point,\u201d he said in an email, before using the app itself to tell me it was \u201cworthless.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "You can\u2019t save messages from others, or even listen to your own before you send them. And unlike an actual walkie-talkie, you have to double-click a button in order to hear your friends\u2019 messages over the speaker. They are sent instantaneously but do not play back automatically. It doesn\u2019t sound promising, especially since young people are notoriously squirmy about leaving and receiving voice mail. And yet the app is a pleasure to use, with an intuitive design and an eye-pleasing color scheme. I have big, clumsy fingers and don\u2019t particularly like to text. With Roger, I can easily press a button, record a quick message and shoot it off to my girlfriend, who is based in Boston, when I don\u2019t have time to call. Sending voice messages is also more intimate than texting. Ricardo Vice Santos, a founder of Roger, said that given the time change, it was often difficult to call his mother in Portugal, five time zones away. Text messages seemed impersonal. Roger bridges the gap, allowing for messages that still convey real warmth. Alas, Roger has not caught on with others in my circle. My girlfriend says she uses it only to humor me. Her cousin is harsher: \u201cI just don\u2019t see the point,\u201d he said in an email, before using the app itself to tell me it was \u201cworthless.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " They are sent instantaneously but do not play back automatically."} +{"question": "Where does the writer's girlfriend live?", "paragraph": "You can\u2019t save messages from others, or even listen to your own before you send them. And unlike an actual walkie-talkie, you have to double-click a button in order to hear your friends\u2019 messages over the speaker. They are sent instantaneously but do not play back automatically. It doesn\u2019t sound promising, especially since young people are notoriously squirmy about leaving and receiving voice mail. And yet the app is a pleasure to use, with an intuitive design and an eye-pleasing color scheme. I have big, clumsy fingers and don\u2019t particularly like to text. With Roger, I can easily press a button, record a quick message and shoot it off to my girlfriend, who is based in Boston, when I don\u2019t have time to call. Sending voice messages is also more intimate than texting. Ricardo Vice Santos, a founder of Roger, said that given the time change, it was often difficult to call his mother in Portugal, five time zones away. Text messages seemed impersonal. Roger bridges the gap, allowing for messages that still convey real warmth. Alas, Roger has not caught on with others in my circle. My girlfriend says she uses it only to humor me. Her cousin is harsher: \u201cI just don\u2019t see the point,\u201d he said in an email, before using the app itself to tell me it was \u201cworthless.\u201d", "answer": "Boston", "sentence": "With Roger, I can easily press a button, record a quick message and shoot it off to my girlfriend, who is based in Boston , when I don\u2019t have time to call.", "paragraph_sentence": "You can\u2019t save messages from others, or even listen to your own before you send them. And unlike an actual walkie-talkie, you have to double-click a button in order to hear your friends\u2019 messages over the speaker. They are sent instantaneously but do not play back automatically. It doesn\u2019t sound promising, especially since young people are notoriously squirmy about leaving and receiving voice mail. And yet the app is a pleasure to use, with an intuitive design and an eye-pleasing color scheme. I have big, clumsy fingers and don\u2019t particularly like to text. With Roger, I can easily press a button, record a quick message and shoot it off to my girlfriend, who is based in Boston , when I don\u2019t have time to call. Sending voice messages is also more intimate than texting. Ricardo Vice Santos, a founder of Roger, said that given the time change, it was often difficult to call his mother in Portugal, five time zones away. Text messages seemed impersonal. Roger bridges the gap, allowing for messages that still convey real warmth. Alas, Roger has not caught on with others in my circle. My girlfriend says she uses it only to humor me. Her cousin is harsher: \u201cI just don\u2019t see the point,\u201d he said in an email, before using the app itself to tell me it was \u201cworthless.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "You can\u2019t save messages from others, or even listen to your own before you send them. And unlike an actual walkie-talkie, you have to double-click a button in order to hear your friends\u2019 messages over the speaker. They are sent instantaneously but do not play back automatically. It doesn\u2019t sound promising, especially since young people are notoriously squirmy about leaving and receiving voice mail. And yet the app is a pleasure to use, with an intuitive design and an eye-pleasing color scheme. I have big, clumsy fingers and don\u2019t particularly like to text. With Roger, I can easily press a button, record a quick message and shoot it off to my girlfriend, who is based in Boston , when I don\u2019t have time to call. Sending voice messages is also more intimate than texting. Ricardo Vice Santos, a founder of Roger, said that given the time change, it was often difficult to call his mother in Portugal, five time zones away. Text messages seemed impersonal. Roger bridges the gap, allowing for messages that still convey real warmth. Alas, Roger has not caught on with others in my circle. My girlfriend says she uses it only to humor me. Her cousin is harsher: \u201cI just don\u2019t see the point,\u201d he said in an email, before using the app itself to tell me it was \u201cworthless.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "With Roger, I can easily press a button, record a quick message and shoot it off to my girlfriend, who is based in Boston , when I don\u2019t have time to call."} +{"question": "How does the writer describe the app's color scheme?", "paragraph": "You can\u2019t save messages from others, or even listen to your own before you send them. And unlike an actual walkie-talkie, you have to double-click a button in order to hear your friends\u2019 messages over the speaker. They are sent instantaneously but do not play back automatically. It doesn\u2019t sound promising, especially since young people are notoriously squirmy about leaving and receiving voice mail. And yet the app is a pleasure to use, with an intuitive design and an eye-pleasing color scheme. I have big, clumsy fingers and don\u2019t particularly like to text. With Roger, I can easily press a button, record a quick message and shoot it off to my girlfriend, who is based in Boston, when I don\u2019t have time to call. Sending voice messages is also more intimate than texting. Ricardo Vice Santos, a founder of Roger, said that given the time change, it was often difficult to call his mother in Portugal, five time zones away. Text messages seemed impersonal. Roger bridges the gap, allowing for messages that still convey real warmth. Alas, Roger has not caught on with others in my circle. My girlfriend says she uses it only to humor me. Her cousin is harsher: \u201cI just don\u2019t see the point,\u201d he said in an email, before using the app itself to tell me it was \u201cworthless.\u201d", "answer": "eye-pleasing", "sentence": "And yet the app is a pleasure to use, with an intuitive design and an eye-pleasing color scheme.", "paragraph_sentence": "You can\u2019t save messages from others, or even listen to your own before you send them. And unlike an actual walkie-talkie, you have to double-click a button in order to hear your friends\u2019 messages over the speaker. They are sent instantaneously but do not play back automatically. It doesn\u2019t sound promising, especially since young people are notoriously squirmy about leaving and receiving voice mail. And yet the app is a pleasure to use, with an intuitive design and an eye-pleasing color scheme. I have big, clumsy fingers and don\u2019t particularly like to text. With Roger, I can easily press a button, record a quick message and shoot it off to my girlfriend, who is based in Boston, when I don\u2019t have time to call. Sending voice messages is also more intimate than texting. Ricardo Vice Santos, a founder of Roger, said that given the time change, it was often difficult to call his mother in Portugal, five time zones away. Text messages seemed impersonal. Roger bridges the gap, allowing for messages that still convey real warmth. Alas, Roger has not caught on with others in my circle. My girlfriend says she uses it only to humor me. Her cousin is harsher: \u201cI just don\u2019t see the point,\u201d he said in an email, before using the app itself to tell me it was \u201cworthless.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "You can\u2019t save messages from others, or even listen to your own before you send them. And unlike an actual walkie-talkie, you have to double-click a button in order to hear your friends\u2019 messages over the speaker. They are sent instantaneously but do not play back automatically. It doesn\u2019t sound promising, especially since young people are notoriously squirmy about leaving and receiving voice mail. And yet the app is a pleasure to use, with an intuitive design and an eye-pleasing color scheme. I have big, clumsy fingers and don\u2019t particularly like to text. With Roger, I can easily press a button, record a quick message and shoot it off to my girlfriend, who is based in Boston, when I don\u2019t have time to call. Sending voice messages is also more intimate than texting. Ricardo Vice Santos, a founder of Roger, said that given the time change, it was often difficult to call his mother in Portugal, five time zones away. Text messages seemed impersonal. Roger bridges the gap, allowing for messages that still convey real warmth. Alas, Roger has not caught on with others in my circle. My girlfriend says she uses it only to humor me. Her cousin is harsher: \u201cI just don\u2019t see the point,\u201d he said in an email, before using the app itself to tell me it was \u201cworthless.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "And yet the app is a pleasure to use, with an intuitive design and an eye-pleasing color scheme."} +{"question": "What did Roget say about the app before calling it worthless?", "paragraph": "You can\u2019t save messages from others, or even listen to your own before you send them. And unlike an actual walkie-talkie, you have to double-click a button in order to hear your friends\u2019 messages over the speaker. They are sent instantaneously but do not play back automatically. It doesn\u2019t sound promising, especially since young people are notoriously squirmy about leaving and receiving voice mail. And yet the app is a pleasure to use, with an intuitive design and an eye-pleasing color scheme. I have big, clumsy fingers and don\u2019t particularly like to text. With Roger, I can easily press a button, record a quick message and shoot it off to my girlfriend, who is based in Boston, when I don\u2019t have time to call. Sending voice messages is also more intimate than texting. Ricardo Vice Santos, a founder of Roger, said that given the time change, it was often difficult to call his mother in Portugal, five time zones away. Text messages seemed impersonal. Roger bridges the gap, allowing for messages that still convey real warmth. Alas, Roger has not caught on with others in my circle. My girlfriend says she uses it only to humor me. Her cousin is harsher: \u201cI just don\u2019t see the point,\u201d he said in an email, before using the app itself to tell me it was \u201cworthless.\u201d", "answer": "I just don\u2019t see the point", "sentence": "Her cousin is harsher: \u201c I just don\u2019t see the point ,\u201d he said in an email, before using the app itself to tell me it was \u201cworthless.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "You can\u2019t save messages from others, or even listen to your own before you send them. And unlike an actual walkie-talkie, you have to double-click a button in order to hear your friends\u2019 messages over the speaker. They are sent instantaneously but do not play back automatically. It doesn\u2019t sound promising, especially since young people are notoriously squirmy about leaving and receiving voice mail. And yet the app is a pleasure to use, with an intuitive design and an eye-pleasing color scheme. I have big, clumsy fingers and don\u2019t particularly like to text. With Roger, I can easily press a button, record a quick message and shoot it off to my girlfriend, who is based in Boston, when I don\u2019t have time to call. Sending voice messages is also more intimate than texting. Ricardo Vice Santos, a founder of Roger, said that given the time change, it was often difficult to call his mother in Portugal, five time zones away. Text messages seemed impersonal. Roger bridges the gap, allowing for messages that still convey real warmth. Alas, Roger has not caught on with others in my circle. My girlfriend says she uses it only to humor me. Her cousin is harsher: \u201c I just don\u2019t see the point ,\u201d he said in an email, before using the app itself to tell me it was \u201cworthless.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "You can\u2019t save messages from others, or even listen to your own before you send them. And unlike an actual walkie-talkie, you have to double-click a button in order to hear your friends\u2019 messages over the speaker. They are sent instantaneously but do not play back automatically. It doesn\u2019t sound promising, especially since young people are notoriously squirmy about leaving and receiving voice mail. And yet the app is a pleasure to use, with an intuitive design and an eye-pleasing color scheme. I have big, clumsy fingers and don\u2019t particularly like to text. With Roger, I can easily press a button, record a quick message and shoot it off to my girlfriend, who is based in Boston, when I don\u2019t have time to call. Sending voice messages is also more intimate than texting. Ricardo Vice Santos, a founder of Roger, said that given the time change, it was often difficult to call his mother in Portugal, five time zones away. Text messages seemed impersonal. Roger bridges the gap, allowing for messages that still convey real warmth. Alas, Roger has not caught on with others in my circle. My girlfriend says she uses it only to humor me. Her cousin is harsher: \u201c I just don\u2019t see the point ,\u201d he said in an email, before using the app itself to tell me it was \u201cworthless.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Her cousin is harsher: \u201c I just don\u2019t see the point ,\u201d he said in an email, before using the app itself to tell me it was \u201cworthless.\u201d"} +{"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."} +{"question": "Who was killed on the day Lamesa White movied with her children?", "paragraph": "PLANO, Tex. \u2014 Lamesa White and her four children moved in February from the most dangerous public housing project in Dallas to a single-family home in this affluent suburb. On the day she left, one of her daughter\u2019s old schoolmates was shot to death. Ms. White\u2019s escape from the Estell Village housing project \u2014 better known as The Pinks because the buildings were once painted that color \u2014 was made possible by an experiment in housing policy the federal government began in Dallas in 2011 and is now proposing to expand to most other large metropolitan areas.", "answer": "daughter\u2019s old schoolmates", "sentence": "On the day she left, one of her daughter\u2019s old schoolmates was shot to death.", "paragraph_sentence": "PLANO, Tex. \u2014 Lamesa White and her four children moved in February from the most dangerous public housing project in Dallas to a single-family home in this affluent suburb. On the day she left, one of her daughter\u2019s old schoolmates was shot to death. Ms. White\u2019s escape from the Estell Village housing project \u2014 better known as The Pinks because the buildings were once painted that color \u2014 was made possible by an experiment in housing policy the federal government began in Dallas in 2011 and is now proposing to expand to most other large metropolitan areas.", "paragraph_answer": "PLANO, Tex. \u2014 Lamesa White and her four children moved in February from the most dangerous public housing project in Dallas to a single-family home in this affluent suburb. On the day she left, one of her daughter\u2019s old schoolmates was shot to death. Ms. White\u2019s escape from the Estell Village housing project \u2014 better known as The Pinks because the buildings were once painted that color \u2014 was made possible by an experiment in housing policy the federal government began in Dallas in 2011 and is now proposing to expand to most other large metropolitan areas.", "sentence_answer": "On the day she left, one of her daughter\u2019s old schoolmates was shot to death."} +{"question": "What was the name of the housing project Ms. White lived on?", "paragraph": "PLANO, Tex. \u2014 Lamesa White and her four children moved in February from the most dangerous public housing project in Dallas to a single-family home in this affluent suburb. On the day she left, one of her daughter\u2019s old schoolmates was shot to death. Ms. White\u2019s escape from the Estell Village housing project \u2014 better known as The Pinks because the buildings were once painted that color \u2014 was made possible by an experiment in housing policy the federal government began in Dallas in 2011 and is now proposing to expand to most other large metropolitan areas.", "answer": "Estell Village", "sentence": "Ms. White\u2019s escape from the Estell Village housing project \u2014 better known as The Pinks because the buildings were once painted that color \u2014 was made possible by an experiment in housing policy the federal government began in Dallas in 2011 and is now proposing to expand to most other large metropolitan areas.", "paragraph_sentence": "PLANO, Tex. \u2014 Lamesa White and her four children moved in February from the most dangerous public housing project in Dallas to a single-family home in this affluent suburb. On the day she left, one of her daughter\u2019s old schoolmates was shot to death. Ms. White\u2019s escape from the Estell Village housing project \u2014 better known as The Pinks because the buildings were once painted that color \u2014 was made possible by an experiment in housing policy the federal government began in Dallas in 2011 and is now proposing to expand to most other large metropolitan areas. ", "paragraph_answer": "PLANO, Tex. \u2014 Lamesa White and her four children moved in February from the most dangerous public housing project in Dallas to a single-family home in this affluent suburb. On the day she left, one of her daughter\u2019s old schoolmates was shot to death. Ms. White\u2019s escape from the Estell Village housing project \u2014 better known as The Pinks because the buildings were once painted that color \u2014 was made possible by an experiment in housing policy the federal government began in Dallas in 2011 and is now proposing to expand to most other large metropolitan areas.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. White\u2019s escape from the Estell Village housing project \u2014 better known as The Pinks because the buildings were once painted that color \u2014 was made possible by an experiment in housing policy the federal government began in Dallas in 2011 and is now proposing to expand to most other large metropolitan areas."} +{"question": "How many children does Lamesa White have?", "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": "four", "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."} +{"question": "One of Ms. White's children goes to school where?", "paragraph": "One of her children is thriving in a special education program where he gets one-to-one attention, and she is thrilled that the school provides regular updates on his progress. In Dallas, she did not learn that he had been attending the wrong class until she received a notice requiring her to appear at truancy court. Her eldest daughter, 14, has started to talk about going to college. \u201cIt\u2019s so quiet out here,\u201d Ms. White said as she sat in the living room of the first house she has lived in, the family\u2019s new dog on her lap. \u201cI love it.\u201d The government has tried before to fix the rent subsidy program. In the early 1990s, an experiment called Moving to Opportunity required some families to use their vouchers in more expensive neighborhoods. In 2000, a broader initiative raised the value of all vouchers in 49 metropolitan areas. Officials hoped the change would make it possible for families to find rental apartments in a broader range of neighborhoods. Instead, a recent study by the economists Peter Ganong of Harvard and Robert Collinson of New York University found that most families ended up paying higher rents in the same neighborhoods \u2014 and often for the same units.", "answer": "special education program", "sentence": "One of her children is thriving in a special education program where he gets one-to-one attention, and she is thrilled that the school provides regular updates on his progress.", "paragraph_sentence": " One of her children is thriving in a special education program where he gets one-to-one attention, and she is thrilled that the school provides regular updates on his progress. In Dallas, she did not learn that he had been attending the wrong class until she received a notice requiring her to appear at truancy court. Her eldest daughter, 14, has started to talk about going to college. \u201cIt\u2019s so quiet out here,\u201d Ms. White said as she sat in the living room of the first house she has lived in, the family\u2019s new dog on her lap. \u201cI love it.\u201d The government has tried before to fix the rent subsidy program. In the early 1990s, an experiment called Moving to Opportunity required some families to use their vouchers in more expensive neighborhoods. In 2000, a broader initiative raised the value of all vouchers in 49 metropolitan areas. Officials hoped the change would make it possible for families to find rental apartments in a broader range of neighborhoods. Instead, a recent study by the economists Peter Ganong of Harvard and Robert Collinson of New York University found that most families ended up paying higher rents in the same neighborhoods \u2014 and often for the same units.", "paragraph_answer": "One of her children is thriving in a special education program where he gets one-to-one attention, and she is thrilled that the school provides regular updates on his progress. In Dallas, she did not learn that he had been attending the wrong class until she received a notice requiring her to appear at truancy court. Her eldest daughter, 14, has started to talk about going to college. \u201cIt\u2019s so quiet out here,\u201d Ms. White said as she sat in the living room of the first house she has lived in, the family\u2019s new dog on her lap. \u201cI love it.\u201d The government has tried before to fix the rent subsidy program. In the early 1990s, an experiment called Moving to Opportunity required some families to use their vouchers in more expensive neighborhoods. In 2000, a broader initiative raised the value of all vouchers in 49 metropolitan areas. Officials hoped the change would make it possible for families to find rental apartments in a broader range of neighborhoods. Instead, a recent study by the economists Peter Ganong of Harvard and Robert Collinson of New York University found that most families ended up paying higher rents in the same neighborhoods \u2014 and often for the same units.", "sentence_answer": "One of her children is thriving in a special education program where he gets one-to-one attention, and she is thrilled that the school provides regular updates on his progress."} +{"question": "How old is her eldest daughter?", "paragraph": "One of her children is thriving in a special education program where he gets one-to-one attention, and she is thrilled that the school provides regular updates on his progress. In Dallas, she did not learn that he had been attending the wrong class until she received a notice requiring her to appear at truancy court. Her eldest daughter, 14, has started to talk about going to college. \u201cIt\u2019s so quiet out here,\u201d Ms. White said as she sat in the living room of the first house she has lived in, the family\u2019s new dog on her lap. \u201cI love it.\u201d The government has tried before to fix the rent subsidy program. In the early 1990s, an experiment called Moving to Opportunity required some families to use their vouchers in more expensive neighborhoods. In 2000, a broader initiative raised the value of all vouchers in 49 metropolitan areas. Officials hoped the change would make it possible for families to find rental apartments in a broader range of neighborhoods. Instead, a recent study by the economists Peter Ganong of Harvard and Robert Collinson of New York University found that most families ended up paying higher rents in the same neighborhoods \u2014 and often for the same units.", "answer": "14", "sentence": "Her eldest daughter, 14 , has started to talk about going to college.", "paragraph_sentence": "One of her children is thriving in a special education program where he gets one-to-one attention, and she is thrilled that the school provides regular updates on his progress. In Dallas, she did not learn that he had been attending the wrong class until she received a notice requiring her to appear at truancy court. Her eldest daughter, 14 , has started to talk about going to college. \u201cIt\u2019s so quiet out here,\u201d Ms. White said as she sat in the living room of the first house she has lived in, the family\u2019s new dog on her lap. \u201cI love it.\u201d The government has tried before to fix the rent subsidy program. In the early 1990s, an experiment called Moving to Opportunity required some families to use their vouchers in more expensive neighborhoods. In 2000, a broader initiative raised the value of all vouchers in 49 metropolitan areas. Officials hoped the change would make it possible for families to find rental apartments in a broader range of neighborhoods. Instead, a recent study by the economists Peter Ganong of Harvard and Robert Collinson of New York University found that most families ended up paying higher rents in the same neighborhoods \u2014 and often for the same units.", "paragraph_answer": "One of her children is thriving in a special education program where he gets one-to-one attention, and she is thrilled that the school provides regular updates on his progress. In Dallas, she did not learn that he had been attending the wrong class until she received a notice requiring her to appear at truancy court. Her eldest daughter, 14 , has started to talk about going to college. \u201cIt\u2019s so quiet out here,\u201d Ms. White said as she sat in the living room of the first house she has lived in, the family\u2019s new dog on her lap. \u201cI love it.\u201d The government has tried before to fix the rent subsidy program. In the early 1990s, an experiment called Moving to Opportunity required some families to use their vouchers in more expensive neighborhoods. In 2000, a broader initiative raised the value of all vouchers in 49 metropolitan areas. Officials hoped the change would make it possible for families to find rental apartments in a broader range of neighborhoods. Instead, a recent study by the economists Peter Ganong of Harvard and Robert Collinson of New York University found that most families ended up paying higher rents in the same neighborhoods \u2014 and often for the same units.", "sentence_answer": "Her eldest daughter, 14 , has started to talk about going to college."} +{"question": "Where does her eldest daughter want to go when she grows up?", "paragraph": "One of her children is thriving in a special education program where he gets one-to-one attention, and she is thrilled that the school provides regular updates on his progress. In Dallas, she did not learn that he had been attending the wrong class until she received a notice requiring her to appear at truancy court. Her eldest daughter, 14, has started to talk about going to college. \u201cIt\u2019s so quiet out here,\u201d Ms. White said as she sat in the living room of the first house she has lived in, the family\u2019s new dog on her lap. \u201cI love it.\u201d The government has tried before to fix the rent subsidy program. In the early 1990s, an experiment called Moving to Opportunity required some families to use their vouchers in more expensive neighborhoods. In 2000, a broader initiative raised the value of all vouchers in 49 metropolitan areas. Officials hoped the change would make it possible for families to find rental apartments in a broader range of neighborhoods. Instead, a recent study by the economists Peter Ganong of Harvard and Robert Collinson of New York University found that most families ended up paying higher rents in the same neighborhoods \u2014 and often for the same units.", "answer": "college", "sentence": "Her eldest daughter, 14, has started to talk about going to college .", "paragraph_sentence": "One of her children is thriving in a special education program where he gets one-to-one attention, and she is thrilled that the school provides regular updates on his progress. In Dallas, she did not learn that he had been attending the wrong class until she received a notice requiring her to appear at truancy court. Her eldest daughter, 14, has started to talk about going to college . \u201cIt\u2019s so quiet out here,\u201d Ms. White said as she sat in the living room of the first house she has lived in, the family\u2019s new dog on her lap. \u201cI love it.\u201d The government has tried before to fix the rent subsidy program. In the early 1990s, an experiment called Moving to Opportunity required some families to use their vouchers in more expensive neighborhoods. In 2000, a broader initiative raised the value of all vouchers in 49 metropolitan areas. Officials hoped the change would make it possible for families to find rental apartments in a broader range of neighborhoods. Instead, a recent study by the economists Peter Ganong of Harvard and Robert Collinson of New York University found that most families ended up paying higher rents in the same neighborhoods \u2014 and often for the same units.", "paragraph_answer": "One of her children is thriving in a special education program where he gets one-to-one attention, and she is thrilled that the school provides regular updates on his progress. In Dallas, she did not learn that he had been attending the wrong class until she received a notice requiring her to appear at truancy court. Her eldest daughter, 14, has started to talk about going to college . \u201cIt\u2019s so quiet out here,\u201d Ms. White said as she sat in the living room of the first house she has lived in, the family\u2019s new dog on her lap. \u201cI love it.\u201d The government has tried before to fix the rent subsidy program. In the early 1990s, an experiment called Moving to Opportunity required some families to use their vouchers in more expensive neighborhoods. In 2000, a broader initiative raised the value of all vouchers in 49 metropolitan areas. Officials hoped the change would make it possible for families to find rental apartments in a broader range of neighborhoods. Instead, a recent study by the economists Peter Ganong of Harvard and Robert Collinson of New York University found that most families ended up paying higher rents in the same neighborhoods \u2014 and often for the same units.", "sentence_answer": "Her eldest daughter, 14, has started to talk about going to college ."} +{"question": "What year was the experiment \"Moving\" done by the government?", "paragraph": "One of her children is thriving in a special education program where he gets one-to-one attention, and she is thrilled that the school provides regular updates on his progress. In Dallas, she did not learn that he had been attending the wrong class until she received a notice requiring her to appear at truancy court. Her eldest daughter, 14, has started to talk about going to college. \u201cIt\u2019s so quiet out here,\u201d Ms. White said as she sat in the living room of the first house she has lived in, the family\u2019s new dog on her lap. \u201cI love it.\u201d The government has tried before to fix the rent subsidy program. In the early 1990s, an experiment called Moving to Opportunity required some families to use their vouchers in more expensive neighborhoods. In 2000, a broader initiative raised the value of all vouchers in 49 metropolitan areas. Officials hoped the change would make it possible for families to find rental apartments in a broader range of neighborhoods. Instead, a recent study by the economists Peter Ganong of Harvard and Robert Collinson of New York University found that most families ended up paying higher rents in the same neighborhoods \u2014 and often for the same units.", "answer": "1990s", "sentence": "In the early 1990s , an experiment called Moving to Opportunity required some families to use their vouchers in more expensive neighborhoods.", "paragraph_sentence": "One of her children is thriving in a special education program where he gets one-to-one attention, and she is thrilled that the school provides regular updates on his progress. In Dallas, she did not learn that he had been attending the wrong class until she received a notice requiring her to appear at truancy court. Her eldest daughter, 14, has started to talk about going to college. \u201cIt\u2019s so quiet out here,\u201d Ms. White said as she sat in the living room of the first house she has lived in, the family\u2019s new dog on her lap. \u201cI love it.\u201d The government has tried before to fix the rent subsidy program. In the early 1990s , an experiment called Moving to Opportunity required some families to use their vouchers in more expensive neighborhoods. In 2000, a broader initiative raised the value of all vouchers in 49 metropolitan areas. Officials hoped the change would make it possible for families to find rental apartments in a broader range of neighborhoods. Instead, a recent study by the economists Peter Ganong of Harvard and Robert Collinson of New York University found that most families ended up paying higher rents in the same neighborhoods \u2014 and often for the same units.", "paragraph_answer": "One of her children is thriving in a special education program where he gets one-to-one attention, and she is thrilled that the school provides regular updates on his progress. In Dallas, she did not learn that he had been attending the wrong class until she received a notice requiring her to appear at truancy court. Her eldest daughter, 14, has started to talk about going to college. \u201cIt\u2019s so quiet out here,\u201d Ms. White said as she sat in the living room of the first house she has lived in, the family\u2019s new dog on her lap. \u201cI love it.\u201d The government has tried before to fix the rent subsidy program. In the early 1990s , an experiment called Moving to Opportunity required some families to use their vouchers in more expensive neighborhoods. In 2000, a broader initiative raised the value of all vouchers in 49 metropolitan areas. Officials hoped the change would make it possible for families to find rental apartments in a broader range of neighborhoods. Instead, a recent study by the economists Peter Ganong of Harvard and Robert Collinson of New York University found that most families ended up paying higher rents in the same neighborhoods \u2014 and often for the same units.", "sentence_answer": "In the early 1990s , an experiment called Moving to Opportunity required some families to use their vouchers in more expensive neighborhoods."} +{"question": "What do officials agree on about the subsidies?", "paragraph": "The problem, officials have concluded, is that the subsidies were much too small. In 2011, HUD started the Dallas experiment as a part of a settlement with housing activists. It has since added five smaller regions to the program. In Dallas, the maximum subsidy for a three-bedroom apartment is now just $850 in the cheapest ZIP codes, but as much as $1,840 in the most expensive ZIP codes. In 33 of the 50 largest metropolitan areas, the subsidy for the wealthiest ZIP code would be more than twice as high as the subsidy in the poorest ZIP code. In New York, San Diego and Washington, it would be more than three times as high.", "answer": "much too small", "sentence": "The problem, officials have concluded, is that the subsidies were much too small .", "paragraph_sentence": " The problem, officials have concluded, is that the subsidies were much too small . In 2011, HUD started the Dallas experiment as a part of a settlement with housing activists. It has since added five smaller regions to the program. In Dallas, the maximum subsidy for a three-bedroom apartment is now just $850 in the cheapest ZIP codes, but as much as $1,840 in the most expensive ZIP codes. In 33 of the 50 largest metropolitan areas, the subsidy for the wealthiest ZIP code would be more than twice as high as the subsidy in the poorest ZIP code. In New York, San Diego and Washington, it would be more than three times as high.", "paragraph_answer": "The problem, officials have concluded, is that the subsidies were much too small . In 2011, HUD started the Dallas experiment as a part of a settlement with housing activists. It has since added five smaller regions to the program. In Dallas, the maximum subsidy for a three-bedroom apartment is now just $850 in the cheapest ZIP codes, but as much as $1,840 in the most expensive ZIP codes. In 33 of the 50 largest metropolitan areas, the subsidy for the wealthiest ZIP code would be more than twice as high as the subsidy in the poorest ZIP code. In New York, San Diego and Washington, it would be more than three times as high.", "sentence_answer": "The problem, officials have concluded, is that the subsidies were much too small ."} +{"question": "What's the max subsidy for a 3 bedroom apartment in the cheapest area?", "paragraph": "The problem, officials have concluded, is that the subsidies were much too small. In 2011, HUD started the Dallas experiment as a part of a settlement with housing activists. It has since added five smaller regions to the program. In Dallas, the maximum subsidy for a three-bedroom apartment is now just $850 in the cheapest ZIP codes, but as much as $1,840 in the most expensive ZIP codes. In 33 of the 50 largest metropolitan areas, the subsidy for the wealthiest ZIP code would be more than twice as high as the subsidy in the poorest ZIP code. In New York, San Diego and Washington, it would be more than three times as high.", "answer": "$850", "sentence": "In Dallas, the maximum subsidy for a three-bedroom apartment is now just $850 in the cheapest ZIP codes, but as much as $1,840 in the most expensive ZIP codes.", "paragraph_sentence": "The problem, officials have concluded, is that the subsidies were much too small. In 2011, HUD started the Dallas experiment as a part of a settlement with housing activists. It has since added five smaller regions to the program. In Dallas, the maximum subsidy for a three-bedroom apartment is now just $850 in the cheapest ZIP codes, but as much as $1,840 in the most expensive ZIP codes. In 33 of the 50 largest metropolitan areas, the subsidy for the wealthiest ZIP code would be more than twice as high as the subsidy in the poorest ZIP code. In New York, San Diego and Washington, it would be more than three times as high.", "paragraph_answer": "The problem, officials have concluded, is that the subsidies were much too small. In 2011, HUD started the Dallas experiment as a part of a settlement with housing activists. It has since added five smaller regions to the program. In Dallas, the maximum subsidy for a three-bedroom apartment is now just $850 in the cheapest ZIP codes, but as much as $1,840 in the most expensive ZIP codes. In 33 of the 50 largest metropolitan areas, the subsidy for the wealthiest ZIP code would be more than twice as high as the subsidy in the poorest ZIP code. In New York, San Diego and Washington, it would be more than three times as high.", "sentence_answer": "In Dallas, the maximum subsidy for a three-bedroom apartment is now just $850 in the cheapest ZIP codes, but as much as $1,840 in the most expensive ZIP codes."} +{"question": "What is most expensive cost for a 3 bedroom apartment in higher end zipcodes?", "paragraph": "The problem, officials have concluded, is that the subsidies were much too small. In 2011, HUD started the Dallas experiment as a part of a settlement with housing activists. It has since added five smaller regions to the program. In Dallas, the maximum subsidy for a three-bedroom apartment is now just $850 in the cheapest ZIP codes, but as much as $1,840 in the most expensive ZIP codes. In 33 of the 50 largest metropolitan areas, the subsidy for the wealthiest ZIP code would be more than twice as high as the subsidy in the poorest ZIP code. In New York, San Diego and Washington, it would be more than three times as high.", "answer": "$1,840", "sentence": "In Dallas, the maximum subsidy for a three-bedroom apartment is now just $850 in the cheapest ZIP codes, but as much as $1,840 in the most expensive ZIP codes.", "paragraph_sentence": "The problem, officials have concluded, is that the subsidies were much too small. In 2011, HUD started the Dallas experiment as a part of a settlement with housing activists. It has since added five smaller regions to the program. In Dallas, the maximum subsidy for a three-bedroom apartment is now just $850 in the cheapest ZIP codes, but as much as $1,840 in the most expensive ZIP codes. In 33 of the 50 largest metropolitan areas, the subsidy for the wealthiest ZIP code would be more than twice as high as the subsidy in the poorest ZIP code. In New York, San Diego and Washington, it would be more than three times as high.", "paragraph_answer": "The problem, officials have concluded, is that the subsidies were much too small. In 2011, HUD started the Dallas experiment as a part of a settlement with housing activists. It has since added five smaller regions to the program. In Dallas, the maximum subsidy for a three-bedroom apartment is now just $850 in the cheapest ZIP codes, but as much as $1,840 in the most expensive ZIP codes. In 33 of the 50 largest metropolitan areas, the subsidy for the wealthiest ZIP code would be more than twice as high as the subsidy in the poorest ZIP code. In New York, San Diego and Washington, it would be more than three times as high.", "sentence_answer": "In Dallas, the maximum subsidy for a three-bedroom apartment is now just $850 in the cheapest ZIP codes, but as much as $1,840 in the most expensive ZIP codes."} +{"question": "It costs 3 times as much in the what areas?", "paragraph": "The problem, officials have concluded, is that the subsidies were much too small. In 2011, HUD started the Dallas experiment as a part of a settlement with housing activists. It has since added five smaller regions to the program. In Dallas, the maximum subsidy for a three-bedroom apartment is now just $850 in the cheapest ZIP codes, but as much as $1,840 in the most expensive ZIP codes. In 33 of the 50 largest metropolitan areas, the subsidy for the wealthiest ZIP code would be more than twice as high as the subsidy in the poorest ZIP code. In New York, San Diego and Washington, it would be more than three times as high.", "answer": "New York, San Diego and Washington", "sentence": "In New York, San Diego and Washington , it would be more than three times as high.", "paragraph_sentence": "The problem, officials have concluded, is that the subsidies were much too small. In 2011, HUD started the Dallas experiment as a part of a settlement with housing activists. It has since added five smaller regions to the program. In Dallas, the maximum subsidy for a three-bedroom apartment is now just $850 in the cheapest ZIP codes, but as much as $1,840 in the most expensive ZIP codes. In 33 of the 50 largest metropolitan areas, the subsidy for the wealthiest ZIP code would be more than twice as high as the subsidy in the poorest ZIP code. In New York, San Diego and Washington , it would be more than three times as high. ", "paragraph_answer": "The problem, officials have concluded, is that the subsidies were much too small. In 2011, HUD started the Dallas experiment as a part of a settlement with housing activists. It has since added five smaller regions to the program. In Dallas, the maximum subsidy for a three-bedroom apartment is now just $850 in the cheapest ZIP codes, but as much as $1,840 in the most expensive ZIP codes. In 33 of the 50 largest metropolitan areas, the subsidy for the wealthiest ZIP code would be more than twice as high as the subsidy in the poorest ZIP code. In New York, San Diego and Washington , it would be more than three times as high.", "sentence_answer": "In New York, San Diego and Washington , it would be more than three times as high."} +{"question": "How many housing vouchers did Torey Moore obtain?", "paragraph": "(The Supreme Court just handed the Inclusive Communities Project an important victory in a lawsuit seeking to make more housing available. Landlords of properties built with low-income housing tax credits are required to accept vouchers. Inclusive Communities argues that Texas is allocating a disproportionate share of those credits to developers in minority neighborhoods. The Supreme Court ruling in June allows that lawsuit to move forward.) Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood. She had two young children, and she relied on her family to look after the children while she worked. Last year, however, she decided it was time to move. Her children were struggling at school, and when they were not at school, she worried about their safety.", "answer": "29,000", "sentence": "Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood.", "paragraph_sentence": "(The Supreme Court just handed the Inclusive Communities Project an important victory in a lawsuit seeking to make more housing available. Landlords of properties built with low-income housing tax credits are required to accept vouchers. Inclusive Communities argues that Texas is allocating a disproportionate share of those credits to developers in minority neighborhoods. The Supreme Court ruling in June allows that lawsuit to move forward.) Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood. She had two young children, and she relied on her family to look after the children while she worked. Last year, however, she decided it was time to move. Her children were struggling at school, and when they were not at school, she worried about their safety.", "paragraph_answer": "(The Supreme Court just handed the Inclusive Communities Project an important victory in a lawsuit seeking to make more housing available. Landlords of properties built with low-income housing tax credits are required to accept vouchers. Inclusive Communities argues that Texas is allocating a disproportionate share of those credits to developers in minority neighborhoods. The Supreme Court ruling in June allows that lawsuit to move forward.) Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood. She had two young children, and she relied on her family to look after the children while she worked. Last year, however, she decided it was time to move. Her children were struggling at school, and when they were not at school, she worried about their safety.", "sentence_answer": "Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood."} +{"question": "Where did Torey Moore live?", "paragraph": "(The Supreme Court just handed the Inclusive Communities Project an important victory in a lawsuit seeking to make more housing available. Landlords of properties built with low-income housing tax credits are required to accept vouchers. Inclusive Communities argues that Texas is allocating a disproportionate share of those credits to developers in minority neighborhoods. The Supreme Court ruling in June allows that lawsuit to move forward.) Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood. She had two young children, and she relied on her family to look after the children while she worked. Last year, however, she decided it was time to move. Her children were struggling at school, and when they were not at school, she worried about their safety.", "answer": "South Dallas", "sentence": "Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood.", "paragraph_sentence": "(The Supreme Court just handed the Inclusive Communities Project an important victory in a lawsuit seeking to make more housing available. Landlords of properties built with low-income housing tax credits are required to accept vouchers. Inclusive Communities argues that Texas is allocating a disproportionate share of those credits to developers in minority neighborhoods. The Supreme Court ruling in June allows that lawsuit to move forward.) Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood. She had two young children, and she relied on her family to look after the children while she worked. Last year, however, she decided it was time to move. Her children were struggling at school, and when they were not at school, she worried about their safety.", "paragraph_answer": "(The Supreme Court just handed the Inclusive Communities Project an important victory in a lawsuit seeking to make more housing available. Landlords of properties built with low-income housing tax credits are required to accept vouchers. Inclusive Communities argues that Texas is allocating a disproportionate share of those credits to developers in minority neighborhoods. The Supreme Court ruling in June allows that lawsuit to move forward.) Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood. She had two young children, and she relied on her family to look after the children while she worked. Last year, however, she decided it was time to move. Her children were struggling at school, and when they were not at school, she worried about their safety.", "sentence_answer": "Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood."} +{"question": "What are low income housing tax credit based landlords required to accept?", "paragraph": "(The Supreme Court just handed the Inclusive Communities Project an important victory in a lawsuit seeking to make more housing available. Landlords of properties built with low-income housing tax credits are required to accept vouchers. Inclusive Communities argues that Texas is allocating a disproportionate share of those credits to developers in minority neighborhoods. The Supreme Court ruling in June allows that lawsuit to move forward.) Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood. She had two young children, and she relied on her family to look after the children while she worked. Last year, however, she decided it was time to move. Her children were struggling at school, and when they were not at school, she worried about their safety.", "answer": "vouchers", "sentence": "Landlords of properties built with low-income housing tax credits are required to accept vouchers .", "paragraph_sentence": "(The Supreme Court just handed the Inclusive Communities Project an important victory in a lawsuit seeking to make more housing available. Landlords of properties built with low-income housing tax credits are required to accept vouchers . Inclusive Communities argues that Texas is allocating a disproportionate share of those credits to developers in minority neighborhoods. The Supreme Court ruling in June allows that lawsuit to move forward.) Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood. She had two young children, and she relied on her family to look after the children while she worked. Last year, however, she decided it was time to move. Her children were struggling at school, and when they were not at school, she worried about their safety.", "paragraph_answer": "(The Supreme Court just handed the Inclusive Communities Project an important victory in a lawsuit seeking to make more housing available. Landlords of properties built with low-income housing tax credits are required to accept vouchers . Inclusive Communities argues that Texas is allocating a disproportionate share of those credits to developers in minority neighborhoods. The Supreme Court ruling in June allows that lawsuit to move forward.) Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood. She had two young children, and she relied on her family to look after the children while she worked. Last year, however, she decided it was time to move. Her children were struggling at school, and when they were not at school, she worried about their safety.", "sentence_answer": "Landlords of properties built with low-income housing tax credits are required to accept vouchers ."} +{"question": "Who let the lawsuit continue to move forward?", "paragraph": "(The Supreme Court just handed the Inclusive Communities Project an important victory in a lawsuit seeking to make more housing available. Landlords of properties built with low-income housing tax credits are required to accept vouchers. Inclusive Communities argues that Texas is allocating a disproportionate share of those credits to developers in minority neighborhoods. The Supreme Court ruling in June allows that lawsuit to move forward.) Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood. She had two young children, and she relied on her family to look after the children while she worked. Last year, however, she decided it was time to move. Her children were struggling at school, and when they were not at school, she worried about their safety.", "answer": "The Supreme Court", "sentence": "( The Supreme Court just handed the Inclusive Communities Project an important victory in a lawsuit seeking to make more housing available.", "paragraph_sentence": " ( The Supreme Court just handed the Inclusive Communities Project an important victory in a lawsuit seeking to make more housing available. Landlords of properties built with low-income housing tax credits are required to accept vouchers. Inclusive Communities argues that Texas is allocating a disproportionate share of those credits to developers in minority neighborhoods. The Supreme Court ruling in June allows that lawsuit to move forward.) Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood. She had two young children, and she relied on her family to look after the children while she worked. Last year, however, she decided it was time to move. Her children were struggling at school, and when they were not at school, she worried about their safety.", "paragraph_answer": "( The Supreme Court just handed the Inclusive Communities Project an important victory in a lawsuit seeking to make more housing available. Landlords of properties built with low-income housing tax credits are required to accept vouchers. Inclusive Communities argues that Texas is allocating a disproportionate share of those credits to developers in minority neighborhoods. The Supreme Court ruling in June allows that lawsuit to move forward.) Four years ago, when Torey Moore first obtained one of the about 29,000 housing vouchers available to Dallas area residents, she stayed in the same South Dallas neighborhood. She had two young children, and she relied on her family to look after the children while she worked. Last year, however, she decided it was time to move. Her children were struggling at school, and when they were not at school, she worried about their safety.", "sentence_answer": "( The Supreme Court just handed the Inclusive Communities Project an important victory in a lawsuit seeking to make more housing available."} +{"question": "Who are more likely to struggle in new neighborhoods?", "paragraph": "There is also evidence that older children, particularly boys, often struggle in new neighborhoods. The costs of the move can outweigh the benefits of the new place. Ms. White says those issues are real enough but nothing compared with the feeling that she and her family are now safe. She was tired of stepping over the dice players on her stoop, tired of guiding her children around the fragments of broken bottles at the old housing project, which Ms. Russ, the head of the Dallas Housing Authority, called the most dangerous in the city. When she moved, she changed her cellphone number, cutting off her old friends.", "answer": "boys", "sentence": "There is also evidence that older children, particularly boys , often struggle in new neighborhoods.", "paragraph_sentence": " There is also evidence that older children, particularly boys , often struggle in new neighborhoods. The costs of the move can outweigh the benefits of the new place. Ms. White says those issues are real enough but nothing compared with the feeling that she and her family are now safe. She was tired of stepping over the dice players on her stoop, tired of guiding her children around the fragments of broken bottles at the old housing project, which Ms. Russ, the head of the Dallas Housing Authority, called the most dangerous in the city. When she moved, she changed her cellphone number, cutting off her old friends.", "paragraph_answer": "There is also evidence that older children, particularly boys , often struggle in new neighborhoods. The costs of the move can outweigh the benefits of the new place. Ms. White says those issues are real enough but nothing compared with the feeling that she and her family are now safe. She was tired of stepping over the dice players on her stoop, tired of guiding her children around the fragments of broken bottles at the old housing project, which Ms. Russ, the head of the Dallas Housing Authority, called the most dangerous in the city. When she moved, she changed her cellphone number, cutting off her old friends.", "sentence_answer": "There is also evidence that older children, particularly boys , often struggle in new neighborhoods."} +{"question": "Ms. Russ said that the location Ms. White lived in was the most?", "paragraph": "There is also evidence that older children, particularly boys, often struggle in new neighborhoods. The costs of the move can outweigh the benefits of the new place. Ms. White says those issues are real enough but nothing compared with the feeling that she and her family are now safe. She was tired of stepping over the dice players on her stoop, tired of guiding her children around the fragments of broken bottles at the old housing project, which Ms. Russ, the head of the Dallas Housing Authority, called the most dangerous in the city. When she moved, she changed her cellphone number, cutting off her old friends.", "answer": "dangerous in the city", "sentence": "She was tired of stepping over the dice players on her stoop, tired of guiding her children around the fragments of broken bottles at the old housing project, which Ms. Russ, the head of the Dallas Housing Authority, called the most dangerous in the city .", "paragraph_sentence": "There is also evidence that older children, particularly boys, often struggle in new neighborhoods. The costs of the move can outweigh the benefits of the new place. Ms. White says those issues are real enough but nothing compared with the feeling that she and her family are now safe. She was tired of stepping over the dice players on her stoop, tired of guiding her children around the fragments of broken bottles at the old housing project, which Ms. Russ, the head of the Dallas Housing Authority, called the most dangerous in the city . When she moved, she changed her cellphone number, cutting off her old friends.", "paragraph_answer": "There is also evidence that older children, particularly boys, often struggle in new neighborhoods. The costs of the move can outweigh the benefits of the new place. Ms. White says those issues are real enough but nothing compared with the feeling that she and her family are now safe. She was tired of stepping over the dice players on her stoop, tired of guiding her children around the fragments of broken bottles at the old housing project, which Ms. Russ, the head of the Dallas Housing Authority, called the most dangerous in the city . When she moved, she changed her cellphone number, cutting off her old friends.", "sentence_answer": "She was tired of stepping over the dice players on her stoop, tired of guiding her children around the fragments of broken bottles at the old housing project, which Ms. Russ, the head of the Dallas Housing Authority, called the most dangerous in the city ."} +{"question": "When Ms. White moved what did she change?", "paragraph": "There is also evidence that older children, particularly boys, often struggle in new neighborhoods. The costs of the move can outweigh the benefits of the new place. Ms. White says those issues are real enough but nothing compared with the feeling that she and her family are now safe. She was tired of stepping over the dice players on her stoop, tired of guiding her children around the fragments of broken bottles at the old housing project, which Ms. Russ, the head of the Dallas Housing Authority, called the most dangerous in the city. When she moved, she changed her cellphone number, cutting off her old friends.", "answer": "cellphone number", "sentence": "When she moved, she changed her cellphone number , cutting off her old friends.", "paragraph_sentence": "There is also evidence that older children, particularly boys, often struggle in new neighborhoods. The costs of the move can outweigh the benefits of the new place. Ms. White says those issues are real enough but nothing compared with the feeling that she and her family are now safe. She was tired of stepping over the dice players on her stoop, tired of guiding her children around the fragments of broken bottles at the old housing project, which Ms. Russ, the head of the Dallas Housing Authority, called the most dangerous in the city. When she moved, she changed her cellphone number , cutting off her old friends. ", "paragraph_answer": "There is also evidence that older children, particularly boys, often struggle in new neighborhoods. The costs of the move can outweigh the benefits of the new place. Ms. White says those issues are real enough but nothing compared with the feeling that she and her family are now safe. She was tired of stepping over the dice players on her stoop, tired of guiding her children around the fragments of broken bottles at the old housing project, which Ms. Russ, the head of the Dallas Housing Authority, called the most dangerous in the city. When she moved, she changed her cellphone number , cutting off her old friends.", "sentence_answer": "When she moved, she changed her cellphone number , cutting off her old friends."} +{"question": "What was around the ground in her old neighborhood?", "paragraph": "There is also evidence that older children, particularly boys, often struggle in new neighborhoods. The costs of the move can outweigh the benefits of the new place. Ms. White says those issues are real enough but nothing compared with the feeling that she and her family are now safe. She was tired of stepping over the dice players on her stoop, tired of guiding her children around the fragments of broken bottles at the old housing project, which Ms. Russ, the head of the Dallas Housing Authority, called the most dangerous in the city. When she moved, she changed her cellphone number, cutting off her old friends.", "answer": "broken bottles", "sentence": "She was tired of stepping over the dice players on her stoop, tired of guiding her children around the fragments of broken bottles at the old housing project, which Ms. Russ, the head of the Dallas Housing Authority, called the most dangerous in the city.", "paragraph_sentence": "There is also evidence that older children, particularly boys, often struggle in new neighborhoods. The costs of the move can outweigh the benefits of the new place. Ms. White says those issues are real enough but nothing compared with the feeling that she and her family are now safe. She was tired of stepping over the dice players on her stoop, tired of guiding her children around the fragments of broken bottles at the old housing project, which Ms. Russ, the head of the Dallas Housing Authority, called the most dangerous in the city. When she moved, she changed her cellphone number, cutting off her old friends.", "paragraph_answer": "There is also evidence that older children, particularly boys, often struggle in new neighborhoods. The costs of the move can outweigh the benefits of the new place. Ms. White says those issues are real enough but nothing compared with the feeling that she and her family are now safe. She was tired of stepping over the dice players on her stoop, tired of guiding her children around the fragments of broken bottles at the old housing project, which Ms. Russ, the head of the Dallas Housing Authority, called the most dangerous in the city. When she moved, she changed her cellphone number, cutting off her old friends.", "sentence_answer": "She was tired of stepping over the dice players on her stoop, tired of guiding her children around the fragments of broken bottles at the old housing project, which Ms. Russ, the head of the Dallas Housing Authority, called the most dangerous in the city."} +{"question": "Who is one of the largest labor unions in Germany?", "paragraph": "Blockupy is a left-wing alliance of dozens of activist groups from across Europe. Its members include one of the largest German labor unions, the United Service Union, known as Ver.di, and Syriza, the left-wing, anti-austerity Greek political party that is now leading the government in Athens. The European Central Bank is one of Greece\u2019s main creditors, and it is part of the so-called troika of international organizations that are supervising the Greek bailout program that the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is trying to renegotiate. The central bank, along with the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund, is widely blamed for imposing austerity measures on countries that have needed bailouts.", "answer": "United Service Union", "sentence": "Its members include one of the largest German labor unions, the United Service Union , known as Ver.di, and Syriza, the left-wing, anti-austerity Greek political party that is now leading the government in Athens.", "paragraph_sentence": "Blockupy is a left-wing alliance of dozens of activist groups from across Europe. Its members include one of the largest German labor unions, the United Service Union , known as Ver.di, and Syriza, the left-wing, anti-austerity Greek political party that is now leading the government in Athens. The European Central Bank is one of Greece\u2019s main creditors, and it is part of the so-called troika of international organizations that are supervising the Greek bailout program that the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is trying to renegotiate. The central bank, along with the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund, is widely blamed for imposing austerity measures on countries that have needed bailouts.", "paragraph_answer": "Blockupy is a left-wing alliance of dozens of activist groups from across Europe. Its members include one of the largest German labor unions, the United Service Union , known as Ver.di, and Syriza, the left-wing, anti-austerity Greek political party that is now leading the government in Athens. The European Central Bank is one of Greece\u2019s main creditors, and it is part of the so-called troika of international organizations that are supervising the Greek bailout program that the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is trying to renegotiate. The central bank, along with the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund, is widely blamed for imposing austerity measures on countries that have needed bailouts.", "sentence_answer": "Its members include one of the largest German labor unions, the United Service Union , known as Ver.di, and Syriza, the left-wing, anti-austerity Greek political party that is now leading the government in Athens."} +{"question": "Who is one of Greece's main creditors?", "paragraph": "Blockupy is a left-wing alliance of dozens of activist groups from across Europe. Its members include one of the largest German labor unions, the United Service Union, known as Ver.di, and Syriza, the left-wing, anti-austerity Greek political party that is now leading the government in Athens. The European Central Bank is one of Greece\u2019s main creditors, and it is part of the so-called troika of international organizations that are supervising the Greek bailout program that the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is trying to renegotiate. The central bank, along with the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund, is widely blamed for imposing austerity measures on countries that have needed bailouts.", "answer": "European Central Bank", "sentence": "The European Central Bank is one of Greece\u2019s main creditors, and it is part of the so-called troika of international organizations that are supervising the Greek bailout program that the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is trying to renegotiate.", "paragraph_sentence": "Blockupy is a left-wing alliance of dozens of activist groups from across Europe. Its members include one of the largest German labor unions, the United Service Union, known as Ver.di, and Syriza, the left-wing, anti-austerity Greek political party that is now leading the government in Athens. The European Central Bank is one of Greece\u2019s main creditors, and it is part of the so-called troika of international organizations that are supervising the Greek bailout program that the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is trying to renegotiate. The central bank, along with the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund, is widely blamed for imposing austerity measures on countries that have needed bailouts.", "paragraph_answer": "Blockupy is a left-wing alliance of dozens of activist groups from across Europe. Its members include one of the largest German labor unions, the United Service Union, known as Ver.di, and Syriza, the left-wing, anti-austerity Greek political party that is now leading the government in Athens. The European Central Bank is one of Greece\u2019s main creditors, and it is part of the so-called troika of international organizations that are supervising the Greek bailout program that the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is trying to renegotiate. The central bank, along with the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund, is widely blamed for imposing austerity measures on countries that have needed bailouts.", "sentence_answer": "The European Central Bank is one of Greece\u2019s main creditors, and it is part of the so-called troika of international organizations that are supervising the Greek bailout program that the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is trying to renegotiate."} +{"question": "Who is a left-win alliance of activist groups?", "paragraph": "Blockupy is a left-wing alliance of dozens of activist groups from across Europe. Its members include one of the largest German labor unions, the United Service Union, known as Ver.di, and Syriza, the left-wing, anti-austerity Greek political party that is now leading the government in Athens. The European Central Bank is one of Greece\u2019s main creditors, and it is part of the so-called troika of international organizations that are supervising the Greek bailout program that the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is trying to renegotiate. The central bank, along with the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund, is widely blamed for imposing austerity measures on countries that have needed bailouts.", "answer": "Blockupy", "sentence": "Blockupy is a left-wing alliance of dozens of activist groups from across Europe.", "paragraph_sentence": " Blockupy is a left-wing alliance of dozens of activist groups from across Europe. Its members include one of the largest German labor unions, the United Service Union, known as Ver.di, and Syriza, the left-wing, anti-austerity Greek political party that is now leading the government in Athens. The European Central Bank is one of Greece\u2019s main creditors, and it is part of the so-called troika of international organizations that are supervising the Greek bailout program that the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is trying to renegotiate. The central bank, along with the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund, is widely blamed for imposing austerity measures on countries that have needed bailouts.", "paragraph_answer": " Blockupy is a left-wing alliance of dozens of activist groups from across Europe. Its members include one of the largest German labor unions, the United Service Union, known as Ver.di, and Syriza, the left-wing, anti-austerity Greek political party that is now leading the government in Athens. The European Central Bank is one of Greece\u2019s main creditors, and it is part of the so-called troika of international organizations that are supervising the Greek bailout program that the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is trying to renegotiate. The central bank, along with the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund, is widely blamed for imposing austerity measures on countries that have needed bailouts.", "sentence_answer": " Blockupy is a left-wing alliance of dozens of activist groups from across Europe."} +{"question": "What party is now leading the government in Athens?", "paragraph": "Blockupy is a left-wing alliance of dozens of activist groups from across Europe. Its members include one of the largest German labor unions, the United Service Union, known as Ver.di, and Syriza, the left-wing, anti-austerity Greek political party that is now leading the government in Athens. The European Central Bank is one of Greece\u2019s main creditors, and it is part of the so-called troika of international organizations that are supervising the Greek bailout program that the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is trying to renegotiate. The central bank, along with the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund, is widely blamed for imposing austerity measures on countries that have needed bailouts.", "answer": "Syriza", "sentence": "Its members include one of the largest German labor unions, the United Service Union, known as Ver.di, and Syriza , the left-wing, anti-austerity Greek political party that is now leading the government in Athens.", "paragraph_sentence": "Blockupy is a left-wing alliance of dozens of activist groups from across Europe. Its members include one of the largest German labor unions, the United Service Union, known as Ver.di, and Syriza , the left-wing, anti-austerity Greek political party that is now leading the government in Athens. The European Central Bank is one of Greece\u2019s main creditors, and it is part of the so-called troika of international organizations that are supervising the Greek bailout program that the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is trying to renegotiate. The central bank, along with the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund, is widely blamed for imposing austerity measures on countries that have needed bailouts.", "paragraph_answer": "Blockupy is a left-wing alliance of dozens of activist groups from across Europe. Its members include one of the largest German labor unions, the United Service Union, known as Ver.di, and Syriza , the left-wing, anti-austerity Greek political party that is now leading the government in Athens. The European Central Bank is one of Greece\u2019s main creditors, and it is part of the so-called troika of international organizations that are supervising the Greek bailout program that the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is trying to renegotiate. The central bank, along with the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund, is widely blamed for imposing austerity measures on countries that have needed bailouts.", "sentence_answer": "Its members include one of the largest German labor unions, the United Service Union, known as Ver.di, and Syriza , the left-wing, anti-austerity Greek political party that is now leading the government in Athens."} +{"question": "Who is the Prime Minister of Greece?", "paragraph": "Blockupy is a left-wing alliance of dozens of activist groups from across Europe. Its members include one of the largest German labor unions, the United Service Union, known as Ver.di, and Syriza, the left-wing, anti-austerity Greek political party that is now leading the government in Athens. The European Central Bank is one of Greece\u2019s main creditors, and it is part of the so-called troika of international organizations that are supervising the Greek bailout program that the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is trying to renegotiate. The central bank, along with the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund, is widely blamed for imposing austerity measures on countries that have needed bailouts.", "answer": "Alexis Tsipras", "sentence": "The European Central Bank is one of Greece\u2019s main creditors, and it is part of the so-called troika of international organizations that are supervising the Greek bailout program that the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is trying to renegotiate.", "paragraph_sentence": "Blockupy is a left-wing alliance of dozens of activist groups from across Europe. Its members include one of the largest German labor unions, the United Service Union, known as Ver.di, and Syriza, the left-wing, anti-austerity Greek political party that is now leading the government in Athens. The European Central Bank is one of Greece\u2019s main creditors, and it is part of the so-called troika of international organizations that are supervising the Greek bailout program that the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is trying to renegotiate. The central bank, along with the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund, is widely blamed for imposing austerity measures on countries that have needed bailouts.", "paragraph_answer": "Blockupy is a left-wing alliance of dozens of activist groups from across Europe. Its members include one of the largest German labor unions, the United Service Union, known as Ver.di, and Syriza, the left-wing, anti-austerity Greek political party that is now leading the government in Athens. The European Central Bank is one of Greece\u2019s main creditors, and it is part of the so-called troika of international organizations that are supervising the Greek bailout program that the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is trying to renegotiate. The central bank, along with the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund, is widely blamed for imposing austerity measures on countries that have needed bailouts.", "sentence_answer": "The European Central Bank is one of Greece\u2019s main creditors, and it is part of the so-called troika of international organizations that are supervising the Greek bailout program that the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is trying to renegotiate."} +{"question": "Who was giving a speech in the central square?", "paragraph": "Rosina Sfyridou, a German of Greek descent who lives in Frankfurt and was among a small group carrying a Syriza flag near the Main River at midday, said she wanted to fight for democracy and social justice, and not only in Greece. \u201cThe troika is making life difficult,\u201d she said. \u201cSchools are closing. Greeks can\u2019t get proper health care. I have family there; we\u2019re closer to the problem.\u201d Panagiotis Tsianakas, another German of Greek descent, headed to a central square to hear a speech by a Syriza representative, Giorgos Chondros. \u201cThe European finance ministers are brushing democracy to the side,\u201d Mr. Tsianakas said.", "answer": "Giorgos Chondros", "sentence": "Panagiotis Tsianakas, another German of Greek descent, headed to a central square to hear a speech by a Syriza representative, Giorgos Chondros .", "paragraph_sentence": "Rosina Sfyridou, a German of Greek descent who lives in Frankfurt and was among a small group carrying a Syriza flag near the Main River at midday, said she wanted to fight for democracy and social justice, and not only in Greece. \u201cThe troika is making life difficult,\u201d she said. \u201cSchools are closing. Greeks can\u2019t get proper health care. I have family there; we\u2019re closer to the problem.\u201d Panagiotis Tsianakas, another German of Greek descent, headed to a central square to hear a speech by a Syriza representative, Giorgos Chondros . \u201cThe European finance ministers are brushing democracy to the side,\u201d Mr. Tsianakas said.", "paragraph_answer": "Rosina Sfyridou, a German of Greek descent who lives in Frankfurt and was among a small group carrying a Syriza flag near the Main River at midday, said she wanted to fight for democracy and social justice, and not only in Greece. \u201cThe troika is making life difficult,\u201d she said. \u201cSchools are closing. Greeks can\u2019t get proper health care. I have family there; we\u2019re closer to the problem.\u201d Panagiotis Tsianakas, another German of Greek descent, headed to a central square to hear a speech by a Syriza representative, Giorgos Chondros . \u201cThe European finance ministers are brushing democracy to the side,\u201d Mr. Tsianakas said.", "sentence_answer": "Panagiotis Tsianakas, another German of Greek descent, headed to a central square to hear a speech by a Syriza representative, Giorgos Chondros ."} +{"question": "What descent is Rosina Sfyridou of?", "paragraph": "Rosina Sfyridou, a German of Greek descent who lives in Frankfurt and was among a small group carrying a Syriza flag near the Main River at midday, said she wanted to fight for democracy and social justice, and not only in Greece. \u201cThe troika is making life difficult,\u201d she said. \u201cSchools are closing. Greeks can\u2019t get proper health care. I have family there; we\u2019re closer to the problem.\u201d Panagiotis Tsianakas, another German of Greek descent, headed to a central square to hear a speech by a Syriza representative, Giorgos Chondros. \u201cThe European finance ministers are brushing democracy to the side,\u201d Mr. Tsianakas said.", "answer": "Greek", "sentence": "Rosina Sfyridou, a German of Greek descent who lives in Frankfurt and was among a small group carrying a Syriza flag near the Main River at midday, said she wanted to fight for democracy and social justice, and not only in Greece.", "paragraph_sentence": " Rosina Sfyridou, a German of Greek descent who lives in Frankfurt and was among a small group carrying a Syriza flag near the Main River at midday, said she wanted to fight for democracy and social justice, and not only in Greece. \u201cThe troika is making life difficult,\u201d she said. \u201cSchools are closing. Greeks can\u2019t get proper health care. I have family there; we\u2019re closer to the problem.\u201d Panagiotis Tsianakas, another German of Greek descent, headed to a central square to hear a speech by a Syriza representative, Giorgos Chondros. \u201cThe European finance ministers are brushing democracy to the side,\u201d Mr. Tsianakas said.", "paragraph_answer": "Rosina Sfyridou, a German of Greek descent who lives in Frankfurt and was among a small group carrying a Syriza flag near the Main River at midday, said she wanted to fight for democracy and social justice, and not only in Greece. \u201cThe troika is making life difficult,\u201d she said. \u201cSchools are closing. Greeks can\u2019t get proper health care. I have family there; we\u2019re closer to the problem.\u201d Panagiotis Tsianakas, another German of Greek descent, headed to a central square to hear a speech by a Syriza representative, Giorgos Chondros. \u201cThe European finance ministers are brushing democracy to the side,\u201d Mr. Tsianakas said.", "sentence_answer": "Rosina Sfyridou, a German of Greek descent who lives in Frankfurt and was among a small group carrying a Syriza flag near the Main River at midday, said she wanted to fight for democracy and social justice, and not only in Greece."} +{"question": "What can't Greeks get proper care of?", "paragraph": "Rosina Sfyridou, a German of Greek descent who lives in Frankfurt and was among a small group carrying a Syriza flag near the Main River at midday, said she wanted to fight for democracy and social justice, and not only in Greece. \u201cThe troika is making life difficult,\u201d she said. \u201cSchools are closing. Greeks can\u2019t get proper health care. I have family there; we\u2019re closer to the problem.\u201d Panagiotis Tsianakas, another German of Greek descent, headed to a central square to hear a speech by a Syriza representative, Giorgos Chondros. \u201cThe European finance ministers are brushing democracy to the side,\u201d Mr. Tsianakas said.", "answer": "health", "sentence": "Greeks can\u2019t get proper health care.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rosina Sfyridou, a German of Greek descent who lives in Frankfurt and was among a small group carrying a Syriza flag near the Main River at midday, said she wanted to fight for democracy and social justice, and not only in Greece. \u201cThe troika is making life difficult,\u201d she said. \u201cSchools are closing. Greeks can\u2019t get proper health care. I have family there; we\u2019re closer to the problem.\u201d Panagiotis Tsianakas, another German of Greek descent, headed to a central square to hear a speech by a Syriza representative, Giorgos Chondros. \u201cThe European finance ministers are brushing democracy to the side,\u201d Mr. Tsianakas said.", "paragraph_answer": "Rosina Sfyridou, a German of Greek descent who lives in Frankfurt and was among a small group carrying a Syriza flag near the Main River at midday, said she wanted to fight for democracy and social justice, and not only in Greece. \u201cThe troika is making life difficult,\u201d she said. \u201cSchools are closing. Greeks can\u2019t get proper health care. I have family there; we\u2019re closer to the problem.\u201d Panagiotis Tsianakas, another German of Greek descent, headed to a central square to hear a speech by a Syriza representative, Giorgos Chondros. \u201cThe European finance ministers are brushing democracy to the side,\u201d Mr. Tsianakas said.", "sentence_answer": "Greeks can\u2019t get proper health care."} +{"question": "Who is brushing democracy to the side according to Mr. Tsianakas?", "paragraph": "Rosina Sfyridou, a German of Greek descent who lives in Frankfurt and was among a small group carrying a Syriza flag near the Main River at midday, said she wanted to fight for democracy and social justice, and not only in Greece. \u201cThe troika is making life difficult,\u201d she said. \u201cSchools are closing. Greeks can\u2019t get proper health care. I have family there; we\u2019re closer to the problem.\u201d Panagiotis Tsianakas, another German of Greek descent, headed to a central square to hear a speech by a Syriza representative, Giorgos Chondros. \u201cThe European finance ministers are brushing democracy to the side,\u201d Mr. Tsianakas said.", "answer": "European finance ministers", "sentence": "\u201cThe European finance ministers are brushing democracy to the side,\u201d Mr. Tsianakas said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rosina Sfyridou, a German of Greek descent who lives in Frankfurt and was among a small group carrying a Syriza flag near the Main River at midday, said she wanted to fight for democracy and social justice, and not only in Greece. \u201cThe troika is making life difficult,\u201d she said. \u201cSchools are closing. Greeks can\u2019t get proper health care. I have family there; we\u2019re closer to the problem.\u201d Panagiotis Tsianakas, another German of Greek descent, headed to a central square to hear a speech by a Syriza representative, Giorgos Chondros. \u201cThe European finance ministers are brushing democracy to the side,\u201d Mr. Tsianakas said. ", "paragraph_answer": "Rosina Sfyridou, a German of Greek descent who lives in Frankfurt and was among a small group carrying a Syriza flag near the Main River at midday, said she wanted to fight for democracy and social justice, and not only in Greece. \u201cThe troika is making life difficult,\u201d she said. \u201cSchools are closing. Greeks can\u2019t get proper health care. I have family there; we\u2019re closer to the problem.\u201d Panagiotis Tsianakas, another German of Greek descent, headed to a central square to hear a speech by a Syriza representative, Giorgos Chondros. \u201cThe European finance ministers are brushing democracy to the side,\u201d Mr. Tsianakas said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe European finance ministers are brushing democracy to the side,\u201d Mr. Tsianakas said."} +{"question": "Who is Athen's biggest European lender?", "paragraph": "Antagonism has been growing between Greece and Germany, Athens\u2019s biggest European lender. \u201cOur battle in Greece is a battle for all Europeans,\u201d Mr. Chondros told a cheering crowd of about 8,000. \u201cWe need a European organization against austerity, and that organization has started here today.\u201d Employees of the central bank began moving into the new headquarters, which cost about $1.27 billion, near the end of last year. Away from downtown Frankfurt on a park-like site overlooking the Main River, the 600-foot-high tinted-glass tower is a more potent symbol of the central bank\u2019s power than the generic gray high-rise in central Frankfurt that it previously occupied.", "answer": "Germany", "sentence": "Antagonism has been growing between Greece and Germany , Athens\u2019s biggest European lender.", "paragraph_sentence": " Antagonism has been growing between Greece and Germany , Athens\u2019s biggest European lender. \u201cOur battle in Greece is a battle for all Europeans,\u201d Mr. Chondros told a cheering crowd of about 8,000. \u201cWe need a European organization against austerity, and that organization has started here today.\u201d Employees of the central bank began moving into the new headquarters, which cost about $1.27 billion, near the end of last year. Away from downtown Frankfurt on a park-like site overlooking the Main River, the 600-foot-high tinted-glass tower is a more potent symbol of the central bank\u2019s power than the generic gray high-rise in central Frankfurt that it previously occupied.", "paragraph_answer": "Antagonism has been growing between Greece and Germany , Athens\u2019s biggest European lender. \u201cOur battle in Greece is a battle for all Europeans,\u201d Mr. Chondros told a cheering crowd of about 8,000. \u201cWe need a European organization against austerity, and that organization has started here today.\u201d Employees of the central bank began moving into the new headquarters, which cost about $1.27 billion, near the end of last year. Away from downtown Frankfurt on a park-like site overlooking the Main River, the 600-foot-high tinted-glass tower is a more potent symbol of the central bank\u2019s power than the generic gray high-rise in central Frankfurt that it previously occupied.", "sentence_answer": "Antagonism has been growing between Greece and Germany , Athens\u2019s biggest European lender."} +{"question": "How large was the crowd for Mr. Chondros?", "paragraph": "Antagonism has been growing between Greece and Germany, Athens\u2019s biggest European lender. \u201cOur battle in Greece is a battle for all Europeans,\u201d Mr. Chondros told a cheering crowd of about 8,000. \u201cWe need a European organization against austerity, and that organization has started here today.\u201d Employees of the central bank began moving into the new headquarters, which cost about $1.27 billion, near the end of last year. Away from downtown Frankfurt on a park-like site overlooking the Main River, the 600-foot-high tinted-glass tower is a more potent symbol of the central bank\u2019s power than the generic gray high-rise in central Frankfurt that it previously occupied.", "answer": "8,000", "sentence": "\u201cOur battle in Greece is a battle for all Europeans,\u201d Mr. Chondros told a cheering crowd of about 8,000 .", "paragraph_sentence": "Antagonism has been growing between Greece and Germany, Athens\u2019s biggest European lender. \u201cOur battle in Greece is a battle for all Europeans,\u201d Mr. Chondros told a cheering crowd of about 8,000 . \u201cWe need a European organization against austerity, and that organization has started here today.\u201d Employees of the central bank began moving into the new headquarters, which cost about $1.27 billion, near the end of last year. Away from downtown Frankfurt on a park-like site overlooking the Main River, the 600-foot-high tinted-glass tower is a more potent symbol of the central bank\u2019s power than the generic gray high-rise in central Frankfurt that it previously occupied.", "paragraph_answer": "Antagonism has been growing between Greece and Germany, Athens\u2019s biggest European lender. \u201cOur battle in Greece is a battle for all Europeans,\u201d Mr. Chondros told a cheering crowd of about 8,000 . \u201cWe need a European organization against austerity, and that organization has started here today.\u201d Employees of the central bank began moving into the new headquarters, which cost about $1.27 billion, near the end of last year. Away from downtown Frankfurt on a park-like site overlooking the Main River, the 600-foot-high tinted-glass tower is a more potent symbol of the central bank\u2019s power than the generic gray high-rise in central Frankfurt that it previously occupied.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cOur battle in Greece is a battle for all Europeans,\u201d Mr. Chondros told a cheering crowd of about 8,000 ."} +{"question": "Antagonism has been growing between Germany and who?", "paragraph": "Antagonism has been growing between Greece and Germany, Athens\u2019s biggest European lender. \u201cOur battle in Greece is a battle for all Europeans,\u201d Mr. Chondros told a cheering crowd of about 8,000. \u201cWe need a European organization against austerity, and that organization has started here today.\u201d Employees of the central bank began moving into the new headquarters, which cost about $1.27 billion, near the end of last year. Away from downtown Frankfurt on a park-like site overlooking the Main River, the 600-foot-high tinted-glass tower is a more potent symbol of the central bank\u2019s power than the generic gray high-rise in central Frankfurt that it previously occupied.", "answer": "Greece", "sentence": "Antagonism has been growing between Greece and Germany, Athens\u2019s biggest European lender.", "paragraph_sentence": " Antagonism has been growing between Greece and Germany, Athens\u2019s biggest European lender. \u201cOur battle in Greece is a battle for all Europeans,\u201d Mr. Chondros told a cheering crowd of about 8,000. \u201cWe need a European organization against austerity, and that organization has started here today.\u201d Employees of the central bank began moving into the new headquarters, which cost about $1.27 billion, near the end of last year. Away from downtown Frankfurt on a park-like site overlooking the Main River, the 600-foot-high tinted-glass tower is a more potent symbol of the central bank\u2019s power than the generic gray high-rise in central Frankfurt that it previously occupied.", "paragraph_answer": "Antagonism has been growing between Greece and Germany, Athens\u2019s biggest European lender. \u201cOur battle in Greece is a battle for all Europeans,\u201d Mr. Chondros told a cheering crowd of about 8,000. \u201cWe need a European organization against austerity, and that organization has started here today.\u201d Employees of the central bank began moving into the new headquarters, which cost about $1.27 billion, near the end of last year. Away from downtown Frankfurt on a park-like site overlooking the Main River, the 600-foot-high tinted-glass tower is a more potent symbol of the central bank\u2019s power than the generic gray high-rise in central Frankfurt that it previously occupied.", "sentence_answer": "Antagonism has been growing between Greece and Germany, Athens\u2019s biggest European lender."} +{"question": "How much did the new central bank headquarters cost?", "paragraph": "Antagonism has been growing between Greece and Germany, Athens\u2019s biggest European lender. \u201cOur battle in Greece is a battle for all Europeans,\u201d Mr. Chondros told a cheering crowd of about 8,000. \u201cWe need a European organization against austerity, and that organization has started here today.\u201d Employees of the central bank began moving into the new headquarters, which cost about $1.27 billion, near the end of last year. Away from downtown Frankfurt on a park-like site overlooking the Main River, the 600-foot-high tinted-glass tower is a more potent symbol of the central bank\u2019s power than the generic gray high-rise in central Frankfurt that it previously occupied.", "answer": "1.27 billion", "sentence": "Employees of the central bank began moving into the new headquarters, which cost about $ 1.27 billion , near the end of last year.", "paragraph_sentence": "Antagonism has been growing between Greece and Germany, Athens\u2019s biggest European lender. \u201cOur battle in Greece is a battle for all Europeans,\u201d Mr. Chondros told a cheering crowd of about 8,000. \u201cWe need a European organization against austerity, and that organization has started here today.\u201d Employees of the central bank began moving into the new headquarters, which cost about $ 1.27 billion , near the end of last year. Away from downtown Frankfurt on a park-like site overlooking the Main River, the 600-foot-high tinted-glass tower is a more potent symbol of the central bank\u2019s power than the generic gray high-rise in central Frankfurt that it previously occupied.", "paragraph_answer": "Antagonism has been growing between Greece and Germany, Athens\u2019s biggest European lender. \u201cOur battle in Greece is a battle for all Europeans,\u201d Mr. Chondros told a cheering crowd of about 8,000. \u201cWe need a European organization against austerity, and that organization has started here today.\u201d Employees of the central bank began moving into the new headquarters, which cost about $ 1.27 billion , near the end of last year. Away from downtown Frankfurt on a park-like site overlooking the Main River, the 600-foot-high tinted-glass tower is a more potent symbol of the central bank\u2019s power than the generic gray high-rise in central Frankfurt that it previously occupied.", "sentence_answer": "Employees of the central bank began moving into the new headquarters, which cost about $ 1.27 billion , near the end of last year."} +{"question": "How tall is the new central bank headquarters?", "paragraph": "Antagonism has been growing between Greece and Germany, Athens\u2019s biggest European lender. \u201cOur battle in Greece is a battle for all Europeans,\u201d Mr. Chondros told a cheering crowd of about 8,000. \u201cWe need a European organization against austerity, and that organization has started here today.\u201d Employees of the central bank began moving into the new headquarters, which cost about $1.27 billion, near the end of last year. Away from downtown Frankfurt on a park-like site overlooking the Main River, the 600-foot-high tinted-glass tower is a more potent symbol of the central bank\u2019s power than the generic gray high-rise in central Frankfurt that it previously occupied.", "answer": "600-foot", "sentence": "Away from downtown Frankfurt on a park-like site overlooking the Main River, the 600-foot -high tinted-glass tower is a more potent symbol of the central bank\u2019s power than the generic gray high-rise in central Frankfurt that it previously occupied.", "paragraph_sentence": "Antagonism has been growing between Greece and Germany, Athens\u2019s biggest European lender. \u201cOur battle in Greece is a battle for all Europeans,\u201d Mr. Chondros told a cheering crowd of about 8,000. \u201cWe need a European organization against austerity, and that organization has started here today.\u201d Employees of the central bank began moving into the new headquarters, which cost about $1.27 billion, near the end of last year. Away from downtown Frankfurt on a park-like site overlooking the Main River, the 600-foot -high tinted-glass tower is a more potent symbol of the central bank\u2019s power than the generic gray high-rise in central Frankfurt that it previously occupied. ", "paragraph_answer": "Antagonism has been growing between Greece and Germany, Athens\u2019s biggest European lender. \u201cOur battle in Greece is a battle for all Europeans,\u201d Mr. Chondros told a cheering crowd of about 8,000. \u201cWe need a European organization against austerity, and that organization has started here today.\u201d Employees of the central bank began moving into the new headquarters, which cost about $1.27 billion, near the end of last year. Away from downtown Frankfurt on a park-like site overlooking the Main River, the 600-foot -high tinted-glass tower is a more potent symbol of the central bank\u2019s power than the generic gray high-rise in central Frankfurt that it previously occupied.", "sentence_answer": "Away from downtown Frankfurt on a park-like site overlooking the Main River, the 600-foot -high tinted-glass tower is a more potent symbol of the central bank\u2019s power than the generic gray high-rise in central Frankfurt that it previously occupied."} +{"question": "For what network was Stuart Scott an anchor for?", "paragraph": "When the longtime ESPN anchor Stuart Scott quietly agreed to write a memoir last year, appendiceal cancer and chemotherapy were weakening him. His appearances on the network were dwindling. His life was slipping away. There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d So last fall, when Scott was in the midst of a hospitalization that lasted 75 days, a decision was made to advance the publication to early March. Perhaps Scott would live until then.", "answer": "ESPN", "sentence": "When the longtime ESPN anchor Stuart Scott quietly agreed to write a memoir last year, appendiceal cancer and chemotherapy were weakening him.", "paragraph_sentence": " When the longtime ESPN anchor Stuart Scott quietly agreed to write a memoir last year, appendiceal cancer and chemotherapy were weakening him. His appearances on the network were dwindling. His life was slipping away. There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d So last fall, when Scott was in the midst of a hospitalization that lasted 75 days, a decision was made to advance the publication to early March. Perhaps Scott would live until then.", "paragraph_answer": "When the longtime ESPN anchor Stuart Scott quietly agreed to write a memoir last year, appendiceal cancer and chemotherapy were weakening him. His appearances on the network were dwindling. His life was slipping away. There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d So last fall, when Scott was in the midst of a hospitalization that lasted 75 days, a decision was made to advance the publication to early March. Perhaps Scott would live until then.", "sentence_answer": "When the longtime ESPN anchor Stuart Scott quietly agreed to write a memoir last year, appendiceal cancer and chemotherapy were weakening him."} +{"question": "What kind of cancer did Stuart Scott have?", "paragraph": "When the longtime ESPN anchor Stuart Scott quietly agreed to write a memoir last year, appendiceal cancer and chemotherapy were weakening him. His appearances on the network were dwindling. His life was slipping away. There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d So last fall, when Scott was in the midst of a hospitalization that lasted 75 days, a decision was made to advance the publication to early March. Perhaps Scott would live until then.", "answer": "appendiceal cancer", "sentence": "When the longtime ESPN anchor Stuart Scott quietly agreed to write a memoir last year, appendiceal cancer and chemotherapy were weakening him.", "paragraph_sentence": " When the longtime ESPN anchor Stuart Scott quietly agreed to write a memoir last year, appendiceal cancer and chemotherapy were weakening him. His appearances on the network were dwindling. His life was slipping away. There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d So last fall, when Scott was in the midst of a hospitalization that lasted 75 days, a decision was made to advance the publication to early March. Perhaps Scott would live until then.", "paragraph_answer": "When the longtime ESPN anchor Stuart Scott quietly agreed to write a memoir last year, appendiceal cancer and chemotherapy were weakening him. His appearances on the network were dwindling. His life was slipping away. There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d So last fall, when Scott was in the midst of a hospitalization that lasted 75 days, a decision was made to advance the publication to early March. Perhaps Scott would live until then.", "sentence_answer": "When the longtime ESPN anchor Stuart Scott quietly agreed to write a memoir last year, appendiceal cancer and chemotherapy were weakening him."} +{"question": "What was the name of Stuart Scott's memoir?", "paragraph": "When the longtime ESPN anchor Stuart Scott quietly agreed to write a memoir last year, appendiceal cancer and chemotherapy were weakening him. His appearances on the network were dwindling. His life was slipping away. There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d So last fall, when Scott was in the midst of a hospitalization that lasted 75 days, a decision was made to advance the publication to early March. Perhaps Scott would live until then.", "answer": "\u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d", "sentence": "There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d So last fall, when Scott was in the midst of a hospitalization that lasted 75 days, a decision was made to advance the publication to early March.", "paragraph_sentence": "When the longtime ESPN anchor Stuart Scott quietly agreed to write a memoir last year, appendiceal cancer and chemotherapy were weakening him. His appearances on the network were dwindling. His life was slipping away. There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d So last fall, when Scott was in the midst of a hospitalization that lasted 75 days, a decision was made to advance the publication to early March. Perhaps Scott would live until then.", "paragraph_answer": "When the longtime ESPN anchor Stuart Scott quietly agreed to write a memoir last year, appendiceal cancer and chemotherapy were weakening him. His appearances on the network were dwindling. His life was slipping away. There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d So last fall, when Scott was in the midst of a hospitalization that lasted 75 days, a decision was made to advance the publication to early March. Perhaps Scott would live until then.", "sentence_answer": "There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d So last fall, when Scott was in the midst of a hospitalization that lasted 75 days, a decision was made to advance the publication to early March."} +{"question": "What publisher was Stuart Scott working with?", "paragraph": "When the longtime ESPN anchor Stuart Scott quietly agreed to write a memoir last year, appendiceal cancer and chemotherapy were weakening him. His appearances on the network were dwindling. His life was slipping away. There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d So last fall, when Scott was in the midst of a hospitalization that lasted 75 days, a decision was made to advance the publication to early March. Perhaps Scott would live until then.", "answer": "Blue Rider Press", "sentence": "There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "When the longtime ESPN anchor Stuart Scott quietly agreed to write a memoir last year, appendiceal cancer and chemotherapy were weakening him. His appearances on the network were dwindling. His life was slipping away. There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d So last fall, when Scott was in the midst of a hospitalization that lasted 75 days, a decision was made to advance the publication to early March. Perhaps Scott would live until then.", "paragraph_answer": "When the longtime ESPN anchor Stuart Scott quietly agreed to write a memoir last year, appendiceal cancer and chemotherapy were weakening him. His appearances on the network were dwindling. His life was slipping away. There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d So last fall, when Scott was in the midst of a hospitalization that lasted 75 days, a decision was made to advance the publication to early March. Perhaps Scott would live until then.", "sentence_answer": "There was no assurance that he would survive until late May, when Blue Rider Press expected to publish his book, \u201cEvery Day I Fight.\u201d"} +{"question": "Who is the president of Blue Rider?", "paragraph": "David Rosenthal, the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House, said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d But Scott died on Jan. 4. Seventeen days later, ESPN\u2019s website carried an excerpt from the book, the existence of which was not widely known, even among some of Scott\u2019s closest associates. \u201cI had no idea \u2014 no idea,\u201d said Sage Steele, a friend of Scott\u2019s and the host of ESPN\u2019s \u201cNBA Countdown\u201d show. \u201cThen I kept racking my brain, asking, \u2018Did he tell me anything about it?\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "David Rosenthal", "sentence": "David Rosenthal , the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House, said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " David Rosenthal , the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House, said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d But Scott died on Jan. 4. Seventeen days later, ESPN\u2019s website carried an excerpt from the book, the existence of which was not widely known, even among some of Scott\u2019s closest associates. \u201cI had no idea \u2014 no idea,\u201d said Sage Steele, a friend of Scott\u2019s and the host of ESPN\u2019s \u201cNBA Countdown\u201d show. \u201cThen I kept racking my brain, asking, \u2018Did he tell me anything about it?\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": " David Rosenthal , the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House, said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d But Scott died on Jan. 4. Seventeen days later, ESPN\u2019s website carried an excerpt from the book, the existence of which was not widely known, even among some of Scott\u2019s closest associates. \u201cI had no idea \u2014 no idea,\u201d said Sage Steele, a friend of Scott\u2019s and the host of ESPN\u2019s \u201cNBA Countdown\u201d show. \u201cThen I kept racking my brain, asking, \u2018Did he tell me anything about it?\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": " David Rosenthal , the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House, said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d"} +{"question": "When did Stuart Scott die?", "paragraph": "David Rosenthal, the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House, said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d But Scott died on Jan. 4. Seventeen days later, ESPN\u2019s website carried an excerpt from the book, the existence of which was not widely known, even among some of Scott\u2019s closest associates. \u201cI had no idea \u2014 no idea,\u201d said Sage Steele, a friend of Scott\u2019s and the host of ESPN\u2019s \u201cNBA Countdown\u201d show. \u201cThen I kept racking my brain, asking, \u2018Did he tell me anything about it?\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "Jan. 4", "sentence": "But Scott died on Jan. 4 .", "paragraph_sentence": "David Rosenthal, the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House, said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d But Scott died on Jan. 4 . Seventeen days later, ESPN\u2019s website carried an excerpt from the book, the existence of which was not widely known, even among some of Scott\u2019s closest associates. \u201cI had no idea \u2014 no idea,\u201d said Sage Steele, a friend of Scott\u2019s and the host of ESPN\u2019s \u201cNBA Countdown\u201d show. \u201cThen I kept racking my brain, asking, \u2018Did he tell me anything about it?\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "David Rosenthal, the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House, said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d But Scott died on Jan. 4 . Seventeen days later, ESPN\u2019s website carried an excerpt from the book, the existence of which was not widely known, even among some of Scott\u2019s closest associates. \u201cI had no idea \u2014 no idea,\u201d said Sage Steele, a friend of Scott\u2019s and the host of ESPN\u2019s \u201cNBA Countdown\u201d show. \u201cThen I kept racking my brain, asking, \u2018Did he tell me anything about it?\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "But Scott died on Jan. 4 ."} +{"question": "What website carried an excerpt of Scott's memoir?", "paragraph": "David Rosenthal, the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House, said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d But Scott died on Jan. 4. Seventeen days later, ESPN\u2019s website carried an excerpt from the book, the existence of which was not widely known, even among some of Scott\u2019s closest associates. \u201cI had no idea \u2014 no idea,\u201d said Sage Steele, a friend of Scott\u2019s and the host of ESPN\u2019s \u201cNBA Countdown\u201d show. \u201cThen I kept racking my brain, asking, \u2018Did he tell me anything about it?\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "ESPN\u2019s website", "sentence": "Seventeen days later, ESPN\u2019s website carried an excerpt from the book, the existence of which was not widely known, even among some of Scott\u2019s closest associates.", "paragraph_sentence": "David Rosenthal, the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House, said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d But Scott died on Jan. 4. Seventeen days later, ESPN\u2019s website carried an excerpt from the book, the existence of which was not widely known, even among some of Scott\u2019s closest associates. \u201cI had no idea \u2014 no idea,\u201d said Sage Steele, a friend of Scott\u2019s and the host of ESPN\u2019s \u201cNBA Countdown\u201d show. \u201cThen I kept racking my brain, asking, \u2018Did he tell me anything about it?\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "David Rosenthal, the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House, said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d But Scott died on Jan. 4. Seventeen days later, ESPN\u2019s website carried an excerpt from the book, the existence of which was not widely known, even among some of Scott\u2019s closest associates. \u201cI had no idea \u2014 no idea,\u201d said Sage Steele, a friend of Scott\u2019s and the host of ESPN\u2019s \u201cNBA Countdown\u201d show. \u201cThen I kept racking my brain, asking, \u2018Did he tell me anything about it?\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "Seventeen days later, ESPN\u2019s website carried an excerpt from the book, the existence of which was not widely known, even among some of Scott\u2019s closest associates."} +{"question": "Who hosts ESPN's \"NBA Countdown\"?", "paragraph": "David Rosenthal, the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House, said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d But Scott died on Jan. 4. Seventeen days later, ESPN\u2019s website carried an excerpt from the book, the existence of which was not widely known, even among some of Scott\u2019s closest associates. \u201cI had no idea \u2014 no idea,\u201d said Sage Steele, a friend of Scott\u2019s and the host of ESPN\u2019s \u201cNBA Countdown\u201d show. \u201cThen I kept racking my brain, asking, \u2018Did he tell me anything about it?\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "Sage Steele", "sentence": "\u201cI had no idea \u2014 no idea,\u201d said Sage Steele , a friend of Scott\u2019s and the host of ESPN\u2019s \u201cNBA Countdown\u201d show.", "paragraph_sentence": "David Rosenthal, the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House, said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d But Scott died on Jan. 4. Seventeen days later, ESPN\u2019s website carried an excerpt from the book, the existence of which was not widely known, even among some of Scott\u2019s closest associates. \u201cI had no idea \u2014 no idea,\u201d said Sage Steele , a friend of Scott\u2019s and the host of ESPN\u2019s \u201cNBA Countdown\u201d show. \u201cThen I kept racking my brain, asking, \u2018Did he tell me anything about it?\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "David Rosenthal, the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House, said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d But Scott died on Jan. 4. Seventeen days later, ESPN\u2019s website carried an excerpt from the book, the existence of which was not widely known, even among some of Scott\u2019s closest associates. \u201cI had no idea \u2014 no idea,\u201d said Sage Steele , a friend of Scott\u2019s and the host of ESPN\u2019s \u201cNBA Countdown\u201d show. \u201cThen I kept racking my brain, asking, \u2018Did he tell me anything about it?\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI had no idea \u2014 no idea,\u201d said Sage Steele , a friend of Scott\u2019s and the host of ESPN\u2019s \u201cNBA Countdown\u201d show."} +{"question": "Blue Rider is a division of what larger publisher?", "paragraph": "David Rosenthal, the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House, said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d But Scott died on Jan. 4. Seventeen days later, ESPN\u2019s website carried an excerpt from the book, the existence of which was not widely known, even among some of Scott\u2019s closest associates. \u201cI had no idea \u2014 no idea,\u201d said Sage Steele, a friend of Scott\u2019s and the host of ESPN\u2019s \u201cNBA Countdown\u201d show. \u201cThen I kept racking my brain, asking, \u2018Did he tell me anything about it?\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "Penguin Random House", "sentence": "David Rosenthal, the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House , said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " David Rosenthal, the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House , said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d But Scott died on Jan. 4. Seventeen days later, ESPN\u2019s website carried an excerpt from the book, the existence of which was not widely known, even among some of Scott\u2019s closest associates. \u201cI had no idea \u2014 no idea,\u201d said Sage Steele, a friend of Scott\u2019s and the host of ESPN\u2019s \u201cNBA Countdown\u201d show. \u201cThen I kept racking my brain, asking, \u2018Did he tell me anything about it?\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "David Rosenthal, the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House , said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d But Scott died on Jan. 4. Seventeen days later, ESPN\u2019s website carried an excerpt from the book, the existence of which was not widely known, even among some of Scott\u2019s closest associates. \u201cI had no idea \u2014 no idea,\u201d said Sage Steele, a friend of Scott\u2019s and the host of ESPN\u2019s \u201cNBA Countdown\u201d show. \u201cThen I kept racking my brain, asking, \u2018Did he tell me anything about it?\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "David Rosenthal, the president and publisher of Blue Rider, a division of Penguin Random House , said, \u201cIf he had gone into remission, it would have been a wonderful miracle.\u201d"} +{"question": "What was the name of the design company that estimated the demolition price?", "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": "Clark Patterson Lee", "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."} +{"question": "What was the estimated cost of demolition before any bids were received?", "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": "$3.9 million", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "What was the single highest bid received?", "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": "$7.7 million", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "What is the name of the building that has been argued about for a long time?", "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": "Rudolph center", "sentence": "Officials backing demolition say that debates over the Rudolph center have gone on too long.", "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": "Officials backing demolition say that debates over the Rudolph center have gone on too long."} +{"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."} +{"question": "When did Mr. Kohlberg start working at Bear Stearns?", "paragraph": "Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955. But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company became a major force that set the tone for the buyout industry, particularly after it took over the tobacco and food conglomerate R.J.R. Nabisco \u2014 the deal made famous in the book \u201cBarbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco,\u201d by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, although Mr. Kohlberg left the firm a year before the deal was completed.", "answer": "1955", "sentence": "Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955 .", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955 . But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company became a major force that set the tone for the buyout industry, particularly after it took over the tobacco and food conglomerate R.J.R. Nabisco \u2014 the deal made famous in the book \u201cBarbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco,\u201d by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, although Mr. Kohlberg left the firm a year before the deal was completed.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955 . But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company became a major force that set the tone for the buyout industry, particularly after it took over the tobacco and food conglomerate R.J.R. Nabisco \u2014 the deal made famous in the book \u201cBarbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco,\u201d by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, although Mr. Kohlberg left the firm a year before the deal was completed.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955 ."} +{"question": "Who mentored Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts?", "paragraph": "Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955. But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company became a major force that set the tone for the buyout industry, particularly after it took over the tobacco and food conglomerate R.J.R. Nabisco \u2014 the deal made famous in the book \u201cBarbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco,\u201d by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, although Mr. Kohlberg left the firm a year before the deal was completed.", "answer": "Mr. Kohlberg", "sentence": "Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955. But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company became a major force that set the tone for the buyout industry, particularly after it took over the tobacco and food conglomerate R.J.R. Nabisco \u2014 the deal made famous in the book \u201cBarbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco,\u201d by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, although Mr. Kohlberg left the firm a year before the deal was completed.", "paragraph_answer": " Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955. But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company became a major force that set the tone for the buyout industry, particularly after it took over the tobacco and food conglomerate R.J.R. Nabisco \u2014 the deal made famous in the book \u201cBarbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco,\u201d by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, although Mr. Kohlberg left the firm a year before the deal was completed.", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955."} +{"question": "When did Mr. Kohlberg leave Bear Stearns?", "paragraph": "Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955. But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company became a major force that set the tone for the buyout industry, particularly after it took over the tobacco and food conglomerate R.J.R. Nabisco \u2014 the deal made famous in the book \u201cBarbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco,\u201d by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, although Mr. Kohlberg left the firm a year before the deal was completed.", "answer": "1976", "sentence": "But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955. But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company became a major force that set the tone for the buyout industry, particularly after it took over the tobacco and food conglomerate R.J.R. Nabisco \u2014 the deal made famous in the book \u201cBarbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco,\u201d by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, although Mr. Kohlberg left the firm a year before the deal was completed.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955. But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company became a major force that set the tone for the buyout industry, particularly after it took over the tobacco and food conglomerate R.J.R. Nabisco \u2014 the deal made famous in the book \u201cBarbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco,\u201d by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, although Mr. Kohlberg left the firm a year before the deal was completed.", "sentence_answer": "But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names."} +{"question": "What did Mr. Kohlberg, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts form in 1976?", "paragraph": "Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955. But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company became a major force that set the tone for the buyout industry, particularly after it took over the tobacco and food conglomerate R.J.R. Nabisco \u2014 the deal made famous in the book \u201cBarbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco,\u201d by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, although Mr. Kohlberg left the firm a year before the deal was completed.", "answer": "a new investment firm", "sentence": "But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955. But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company became a major force that set the tone for the buyout industry, particularly after it took over the tobacco and food conglomerate R.J.R. Nabisco \u2014 the deal made famous in the book \u201cBarbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco,\u201d by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, although Mr. Kohlberg left the firm a year before the deal was completed.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955. But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company became a major force that set the tone for the buyout industry, particularly after it took over the tobacco and food conglomerate R.J.R. Nabisco \u2014 the deal made famous in the book \u201cBarbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco,\u201d by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, although Mr. Kohlberg left the firm a year before the deal was completed.", "sentence_answer": "But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names."} +{"question": "What was the name of the new investment firm Mr. Kohlberg started after leaving Bear Stearns?", "paragraph": "Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955. But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company became a major force that set the tone for the buyout industry, particularly after it took over the tobacco and food conglomerate R.J.R. Nabisco \u2014 the deal made famous in the book \u201cBarbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco,\u201d by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, although Mr. Kohlberg left the firm a year before the deal was completed.", "answer": "Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company", "sentence": "Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company became a major force that set the tone for the buyout industry, particularly after it took over the tobacco and food conglomerate R.J.R. Nabisco \u2014 the deal made famous in the book \u201cBarbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco,\u201d by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, although Mr. Kohlberg left the firm a year before the deal was completed.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955. But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company became a major force that set the tone for the buyout industry, particularly after it took over the tobacco and food conglomerate R.J.R. Nabisco \u2014 the deal made famous in the book \u201cBarbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco,\u201d by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, although Mr. Kohlberg left the firm a year before the deal was completed. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Kohlberg rose through the ranks of the investment bank Bear Stearns, where he started working in 1955. But he and two younger men whom he had mentored, Henry R. Kravis and George R. Roberts, eventually left in 1976 to form a new investment firm bearing their names. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company became a major force that set the tone for the buyout industry, particularly after it took over the tobacco and food conglomerate R.J.R. Nabisco \u2014 the deal made famous in the book \u201cBarbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco,\u201d by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, although Mr. Kohlberg left the firm a year before the deal was completed.", "sentence_answer": " Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company became a major force that set the tone for the buyout industry, particularly after it took over the tobacco and food conglomerate R.J.R. Nabisco \u2014 the deal made famous in the book \u201cBarbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco,\u201d by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, although Mr. Kohlberg left the firm a year before the deal was completed."} +{"question": "What separated Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s?", "paragraph": "Yet Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s grew apart, separated by philosophies over corporate strategy and lifestyle. Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals, always on friendly terms. By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994, the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group. Mr. Kohlberg maintained a less ostentatious life, shunning the high-roller social soirees for tennis, reading and later yoga.", "answer": "corporate strategy and lifestyle", "sentence": "Yet Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s grew apart, separated by philosophies over corporate strategy and lifestyle .", "paragraph_sentence": " Yet Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s grew apart, separated by philosophies over corporate strategy and lifestyle . Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals, always on friendly terms. By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994, the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group. Mr. Kohlberg maintained a less ostentatious life, shunning the high-roller social soirees for tennis, reading and later yoga.", "paragraph_answer": "Yet Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s grew apart, separated by philosophies over corporate strategy and lifestyle . Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals, always on friendly terms. By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994, the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group. Mr. Kohlberg maintained a less ostentatious life, shunning the high-roller social soirees for tennis, reading and later yoga.", "sentence_answer": "Yet Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s grew apart, separated by philosophies over corporate strategy and lifestyle ."} +{"question": "Out of the three partners, who wanted to purse hostile takeovers?", "paragraph": "Yet Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s grew apart, separated by philosophies over corporate strategy and lifestyle. Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals, always on friendly terms. By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994, the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group. Mr. Kohlberg maintained a less ostentatious life, shunning the high-roller social soirees for tennis, reading and later yoga.", "answer": "Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts", "sentence": "Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals, always on friendly terms.", "paragraph_sentence": "Yet Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s grew apart, separated by philosophies over corporate strategy and lifestyle. Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals, always on friendly terms. By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994, the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group. Mr. Kohlberg maintained a less ostentatious life, shunning the high-roller social soirees for tennis, reading and later yoga.", "paragraph_answer": "Yet Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s grew apart, separated by philosophies over corporate strategy and lifestyle. Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals, always on friendly terms. By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994, the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group. Mr. Kohlberg maintained a less ostentatious life, shunning the high-roller social soirees for tennis, reading and later yoga.", "sentence_answer": "Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals, always on friendly terms."} +{"question": "When did Mr. Kohlberg retire?", "paragraph": "Yet Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s grew apart, separated by philosophies over corporate strategy and lifestyle. Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals, always on friendly terms. By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994, the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group. Mr. Kohlberg maintained a less ostentatious life, shunning the high-roller social soirees for tennis, reading and later yoga.", "answer": "1994", "sentence": "By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994 , the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group.", "paragraph_sentence": "Yet Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s grew apart, separated by philosophies over corporate strategy and lifestyle. Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals, always on friendly terms. By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994 , the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group. Mr. Kohlberg maintained a less ostentatious life, shunning the high-roller social soirees for tennis, reading and later yoga.", "paragraph_answer": "Yet Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s grew apart, separated by philosophies over corporate strategy and lifestyle. Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals, always on friendly terms. By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994 , the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group. Mr. Kohlberg maintained a less ostentatious life, shunning the high-roller social soirees for tennis, reading and later yoga.", "sentence_answer": "By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994 , the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group."} +{"question": "What was the private equity business once known as?", "paragraph": "Yet Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s grew apart, separated by philosophies over corporate strategy and lifestyle. Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals, always on friendly terms. By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994, the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group. Mr. Kohlberg maintained a less ostentatious life, shunning the high-roller social soirees for tennis, reading and later yoga.", "answer": "the leveraged-buyout business", "sentence": "By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994, the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group.", "paragraph_sentence": "Yet Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s grew apart, separated by philosophies over corporate strategy and lifestyle. Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals, always on friendly terms. By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994, the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group. Mr. Kohlberg maintained a less ostentatious life, shunning the high-roller social soirees for tennis, reading and later yoga.", "paragraph_answer": "Yet Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s grew apart, separated by philosophies over corporate strategy and lifestyle. Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals, always on friendly terms. By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994, the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group. Mr. Kohlberg maintained a less ostentatious life, shunning the high-roller social soirees for tennis, reading and later yoga.", "sentence_answer": "By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994, the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group."} +{"question": "What type of deals did Mr. Kohlberg like to focus on?", "paragraph": "Yet Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s grew apart, separated by philosophies over corporate strategy and lifestyle. Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals, always on friendly terms. By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994, the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group. Mr. Kohlberg maintained a less ostentatious life, shunning the high-roller social soirees for tennis, reading and later yoga.", "answer": "smaller deals", "sentence": "Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals , always on friendly terms.", "paragraph_sentence": "Yet Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s grew apart, separated by philosophies over corporate strategy and lifestyle. Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals , always on friendly terms. By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994, the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group. Mr. Kohlberg maintained a less ostentatious life, shunning the high-roller social soirees for tennis, reading and later yoga.", "paragraph_answer": "Yet Mr. Kohlberg and his prot\u00e9g\u00e9s grew apart, separated by philosophies over corporate strategy and lifestyle. Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals , always on friendly terms. By the time Mr. Kohlberg retired from the sector altogether in 1994, the leveraged-buyout business \u2014 since renamed \u201cprivate equity\u201d \u2014 was on its path to becoming immense, eventually making billionaires of Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, as well as rivals like Stephen A. Schwarzman of the Blackstone Group and David Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group. Mr. Kohlberg maintained a less ostentatious life, shunning the high-roller social soirees for tennis, reading and later yoga.", "sentence_answer": "Where Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts were willing to pursue large-scale, hostile takeovers, Mr. Kohlberg instead chose to focus on smaller deals , always on friendly terms."} +{"question": "Who was Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts mentor?", "paragraph": "That model has underpinned the basic private equity deal ever since. While at Bear Stearns, Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making. But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking. After an attempt to form a leveraged-buyout group within Bear Stearns was rejected, the three men struck out on their own. With the help of eight investors, including Mr. Kravis\u2019s father and Mr. Kohlberg\u2019s $5 million nest egg, they set up Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company in Midtown Manhattan. Though the early years of the firm were sometimes lean, K.K.R.\u2019s business model proved alluring, prompting a growing stream of competitors eager to reap huge profits from deals made with borrowed money.", "answer": "Mr. Kohlberg", "sentence": "While at Bear Stearns, Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making.", "paragraph_sentence": "That model has underpinned the basic private equity deal ever since. While at Bear Stearns, Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making. But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking. After an attempt to form a leveraged-buyout group within Bear Stearns was rejected, the three men struck out on their own. With the help of eight investors, including Mr. Kravis\u2019s father and Mr. Kohlberg\u2019s $5 million nest egg, they set up Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company in Midtown Manhattan. Though the early years of the firm were sometimes lean, K.K.R.\u2019s business model proved alluring, prompting a growing stream of competitors eager to reap huge profits from deals made with borrowed money.", "paragraph_answer": "That model has underpinned the basic private equity deal ever since. While at Bear Stearns, Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making. But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking. After an attempt to form a leveraged-buyout group within Bear Stearns was rejected, the three men struck out on their own. With the help of eight investors, including Mr. Kravis\u2019s father and Mr. Kohlberg\u2019s $5 million nest egg, they set up Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company in Midtown Manhattan. Though the early years of the firm were sometimes lean, K.K.R.\u2019s business model proved alluring, prompting a growing stream of competitors eager to reap huge profits from deals made with borrowed money.", "sentence_answer": "While at Bear Stearns, Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making."} +{"question": "Where did Mr. Kohlberg, Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts work?", "paragraph": "That model has underpinned the basic private equity deal ever since. While at Bear Stearns, Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making. But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking. After an attempt to form a leveraged-buyout group within Bear Stearns was rejected, the three men struck out on their own. With the help of eight investors, including Mr. Kravis\u2019s father and Mr. Kohlberg\u2019s $5 million nest egg, they set up Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company in Midtown Manhattan. Though the early years of the firm were sometimes lean, K.K.R.\u2019s business model proved alluring, prompting a growing stream of competitors eager to reap huge profits from deals made with borrowed money.", "answer": "Bear Stearns", "sentence": "While at Bear Stearns , Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making.", "paragraph_sentence": "That model has underpinned the basic private equity deal ever since. While at Bear Stearns , Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making. But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking. After an attempt to form a leveraged-buyout group within Bear Stearns was rejected, the three men struck out on their own. With the help of eight investors, including Mr. Kravis\u2019s father and Mr. Kohlberg\u2019s $5 million nest egg, they set up Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company in Midtown Manhattan. Though the early years of the firm were sometimes lean, K.K.R.\u2019s business model proved alluring, prompting a growing stream of competitors eager to reap huge profits from deals made with borrowed money.", "paragraph_answer": "That model has underpinned the basic private equity deal ever since. While at Bear Stearns , Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making. But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking. After an attempt to form a leveraged-buyout group within Bear Stearns was rejected, the three men struck out on their own. With the help of eight investors, including Mr. Kravis\u2019s father and Mr. Kohlberg\u2019s $5 million nest egg, they set up Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company in Midtown Manhattan. Though the early years of the firm were sometimes lean, K.K.R.\u2019s business model proved alluring, prompting a growing stream of competitors eager to reap huge profits from deals made with borrowed money.", "sentence_answer": "While at Bear Stearns , Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making."} +{"question": "What was considered to be the bread-and-butter business of Bear Stearns?", "paragraph": "That model has underpinned the basic private equity deal ever since. While at Bear Stearns, Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making. But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking. After an attempt to form a leveraged-buyout group within Bear Stearns was rejected, the three men struck out on their own. With the help of eight investors, including Mr. Kravis\u2019s father and Mr. Kohlberg\u2019s $5 million nest egg, they set up Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company in Midtown Manhattan. Though the early years of the firm were sometimes lean, K.K.R.\u2019s business model proved alluring, prompting a growing stream of competitors eager to reap huge profits from deals made with borrowed money.", "answer": "investment banking", "sentence": "But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking .", "paragraph_sentence": "That model has underpinned the basic private equity deal ever since. While at Bear Stearns, Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making. But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking . After an attempt to form a leveraged-buyout group within Bear Stearns was rejected, the three men struck out on their own. With the help of eight investors, including Mr. Kravis\u2019s father and Mr. Kohlberg\u2019s $5 million nest egg, they set up Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company in Midtown Manhattan. Though the early years of the firm were sometimes lean, K.K.R.\u2019s business model proved alluring, prompting a growing stream of competitors eager to reap huge profits from deals made with borrowed money.", "paragraph_answer": "That model has underpinned the basic private equity deal ever since. While at Bear Stearns, Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making. But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking . After an attempt to form a leveraged-buyout group within Bear Stearns was rejected, the three men struck out on their own. With the help of eight investors, including Mr. Kravis\u2019s father and Mr. Kohlberg\u2019s $5 million nest egg, they set up Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company in Midtown Manhattan. Though the early years of the firm were sometimes lean, K.K.R.\u2019s business model proved alluring, prompting a growing stream of competitors eager to reap huge profits from deals made with borrowed money.", "sentence_answer": "But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking ."} +{"question": "What group did Mr. Kohlberg, Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts attempt to form within Bear Stearns?", "paragraph": "That model has underpinned the basic private equity deal ever since. While at Bear Stearns, Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making. But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking. After an attempt to form a leveraged-buyout group within Bear Stearns was rejected, the three men struck out on their own. With the help of eight investors, including Mr. Kravis\u2019s father and Mr. Kohlberg\u2019s $5 million nest egg, they set up Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company in Midtown Manhattan. Though the early years of the firm were sometimes lean, K.K.R.\u2019s business model proved alluring, prompting a growing stream of competitors eager to reap huge profits from deals made with borrowed money.", "answer": "a leveraged-buyout group", "sentence": "After an attempt to form a leveraged-buyout group within Bear Stearns was rejected, the three men struck out on their own.", "paragraph_sentence": "That model has underpinned the basic private equity deal ever since. While at Bear Stearns, Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making. But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking. After an attempt to form a leveraged-buyout group within Bear Stearns was rejected, the three men struck out on their own. With the help of eight investors, including Mr. Kravis\u2019s father and Mr. Kohlberg\u2019s $5 million nest egg, they set up Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company in Midtown Manhattan. Though the early years of the firm were sometimes lean, K.K.R.\u2019s business model proved alluring, prompting a growing stream of competitors eager to reap huge profits from deals made with borrowed money.", "paragraph_answer": "That model has underpinned the basic private equity deal ever since. While at Bear Stearns, Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making. But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking. After an attempt to form a leveraged-buyout group within Bear Stearns was rejected, the three men struck out on their own. With the help of eight investors, including Mr. Kravis\u2019s father and Mr. Kohlberg\u2019s $5 million nest egg, they set up Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company in Midtown Manhattan. Though the early years of the firm were sometimes lean, K.K.R.\u2019s business model proved alluring, prompting a growing stream of competitors eager to reap huge profits from deals made with borrowed money.", "sentence_answer": "After an attempt to form a leveraged-buyout group within Bear Stearns was rejected, the three men struck out on their own."} +{"question": "How many investors did Mr. Kohlberg, Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts help set up their new venture?", "paragraph": "That model has underpinned the basic private equity deal ever since. While at Bear Stearns, Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making. But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking. After an attempt to form a leveraged-buyout group within Bear Stearns was rejected, the three men struck out on their own. With the help of eight investors, including Mr. Kravis\u2019s father and Mr. Kohlberg\u2019s $5 million nest egg, they set up Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company in Midtown Manhattan. Though the early years of the firm were sometimes lean, K.K.R.\u2019s business model proved alluring, prompting a growing stream of competitors eager to reap huge profits from deals made with borrowed money.", "answer": "eight", "sentence": "With the help of eight investors, including Mr. Kravis\u2019s father and Mr. Kohlberg\u2019s $5 million nest egg, they set up Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company in Midtown Manhattan.", "paragraph_sentence": "That model has underpinned the basic private equity deal ever since. While at Bear Stearns, Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making. But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking. After an attempt to form a leveraged-buyout group within Bear Stearns was rejected, the three men struck out on their own. With the help of eight investors, including Mr. Kravis\u2019s father and Mr. Kohlberg\u2019s $5 million nest egg, they set up Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company in Midtown Manhattan. Though the early years of the firm were sometimes lean, K.K.R.\u2019s business model proved alluring, prompting a growing stream of competitors eager to reap huge profits from deals made with borrowed money.", "paragraph_answer": "That model has underpinned the basic private equity deal ever since. While at Bear Stearns, Mr. Kohlberg became the mentor of two promising Wall Street types, the cousins Mr. Kravis and Mr. Roberts, who quickly took to this form of deal-making. But others at the firm began to grumble about the three spending too much time away from bread-and-butter business of the firm, investment banking. After an attempt to form a leveraged-buyout group within Bear Stearns was rejected, the three men struck out on their own. With the help of eight investors, including Mr. Kravis\u2019s father and Mr. Kohlberg\u2019s $5 million nest egg, they set up Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company in Midtown Manhattan. Though the early years of the firm were sometimes lean, K.K.R.\u2019s business model proved alluring, prompting a growing stream of competitors eager to reap huge profits from deals made with borrowed money.", "sentence_answer": "With the help of eight investors, including Mr. Kravis\u2019s father and Mr. Kohlberg\u2019s $5 million nest egg, they set up Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company in Midtown Manhattan."} +{"question": "When did Mr. Kohlberg form Kohlberg & Company?", "paragraph": "Unable to come to an agreement on a role at the firm where he served as senior founding partner, Mr. Kohlberg left to form his own investment firm, Kohlberg & Company, in 1987, with his son James as co-founder. (James Kohlberg is a board member of The New York Times Company.) \u201cWe must all insist on ethical behavior or we will kill the golden goose,\u201d Mr. Kohlberg said at his last investor conference at K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company has raised $5 billion from investors since its inception, having struck $10 billion worth of deals in its own right.", "answer": "1987", "sentence": "Unable to come to an agreement on a role at the firm where he served as senior founding partner, Mr. Kohlberg left to form his own investment firm, Kohlberg & Company, in 1987 , with his son James as co-founder.", "paragraph_sentence": " Unable to come to an agreement on a role at the firm where he served as senior founding partner, Mr. Kohlberg left to form his own investment firm, Kohlberg & Company, in 1987 , with his son James as co-founder. (James Kohlberg is a board member of The New York Times Company.) \u201cWe must all insist on ethical behavior or we will kill the golden goose,\u201d Mr. Kohlberg said at his last investor conference at K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company has raised $5 billion from investors since its inception, having struck $10 billion worth of deals in its own right.", "paragraph_answer": "Unable to come to an agreement on a role at the firm where he served as senior founding partner, Mr. Kohlberg left to form his own investment firm, Kohlberg & Company, in 1987 , with his son James as co-founder. (James Kohlberg is a board member of The New York Times Company.) \u201cWe must all insist on ethical behavior or we will kill the golden goose,\u201d Mr. Kohlberg said at his last investor conference at K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company has raised $5 billion from investors since its inception, having struck $10 billion worth of deals in its own right.", "sentence_answer": "Unable to come to an agreement on a role at the firm where he served as senior founding partner, Mr. Kohlberg left to form his own investment firm, Kohlberg & Company, in 1987 , with his son James as co-founder."} +{"question": "Who was the co-founder of Kohlberg & Company with Mr. Kohlberg?", "paragraph": "Unable to come to an agreement on a role at the firm where he served as senior founding partner, Mr. Kohlberg left to form his own investment firm, Kohlberg & Company, in 1987, with his son James as co-founder. (James Kohlberg is a board member of The New York Times Company.) \u201cWe must all insist on ethical behavior or we will kill the golden goose,\u201d Mr. Kohlberg said at his last investor conference at K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company has raised $5 billion from investors since its inception, having struck $10 billion worth of deals in its own right.", "answer": "his son James", "sentence": "Unable to come to an agreement on a role at the firm where he served as senior founding partner, Mr. Kohlberg left to form his own investment firm, Kohlberg & Company, in 1987, with his son James as co-founder.", "paragraph_sentence": " Unable to come to an agreement on a role at the firm where he served as senior founding partner, Mr. Kohlberg left to form his own investment firm, Kohlberg & Company, in 1987, with his son James as co-founder. (James Kohlberg is a board member of The New York Times Company.) \u201cWe must all insist on ethical behavior or we will kill the golden goose,\u201d Mr. Kohlberg said at his last investor conference at K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company has raised $5 billion from investors since its inception, having struck $10 billion worth of deals in its own right.", "paragraph_answer": "Unable to come to an agreement on a role at the firm where he served as senior founding partner, Mr. Kohlberg left to form his own investment firm, Kohlberg & Company, in 1987, with his son James as co-founder. (James Kohlberg is a board member of The New York Times Company.) \u201cWe must all insist on ethical behavior or we will kill the golden goose,\u201d Mr. Kohlberg said at his last investor conference at K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company has raised $5 billion from investors since its inception, having struck $10 billion worth of deals in its own right.", "sentence_answer": "Unable to come to an agreement on a role at the firm where he served as senior founding partner, Mr. Kohlberg left to form his own investment firm, Kohlberg & Company, in 1987, with his son James as co-founder."} +{"question": "How much money has K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company raised from investors?", "paragraph": "Unable to come to an agreement on a role at the firm where he served as senior founding partner, Mr. Kohlberg left to form his own investment firm, Kohlberg & Company, in 1987, with his son James as co-founder. (James Kohlberg is a board member of The New York Times Company.) \u201cWe must all insist on ethical behavior or we will kill the golden goose,\u201d Mr. Kohlberg said at his last investor conference at K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company has raised $5 billion from investors since its inception, having struck $10 billion worth of deals in its own right.", "answer": "$5 billion", "sentence": "\u201cWe must all insist on ethical behavior or we will kill the golden goose,\u201d Mr. Kohlberg said at his last investor conference at K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company has raised $5 billion from investors since its inception, having struck $10 billion worth of deals in its own right.", "paragraph_sentence": "Unable to come to an agreement on a role at the firm where he served as senior founding partner, Mr. Kohlberg left to form his own investment firm, Kohlberg & Company, in 1987, with his son James as co-founder. (James Kohlberg is a board member of The New York Times Company.) \u201cWe must all insist on ethical behavior or we will kill the golden goose,\u201d Mr. Kohlberg said at his last investor conference at K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company has raised $5 billion from investors since its inception, having struck $10 billion worth of deals in its own right. ", "paragraph_answer": "Unable to come to an agreement on a role at the firm where he served as senior founding partner, Mr. Kohlberg left to form his own investment firm, Kohlberg & Company, in 1987, with his son James as co-founder. (James Kohlberg is a board member of The New York Times Company.) \u201cWe must all insist on ethical behavior or we will kill the golden goose,\u201d Mr. Kohlberg said at his last investor conference at K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company has raised $5 billion from investors since its inception, having struck $10 billion worth of deals in its own right.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe must all insist on ethical behavior or we will kill the golden goose,\u201d Mr. Kohlberg said at his last investor conference at K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company has raised $5 billion from investors since its inception, having struck $10 billion worth of deals in its own right."} +{"question": "Who is a board member of the New York Times Company?", "paragraph": "Unable to come to an agreement on a role at the firm where he served as senior founding partner, Mr. Kohlberg left to form his own investment firm, Kohlberg & Company, in 1987, with his son James as co-founder. (James Kohlberg is a board member of The New York Times Company.) \u201cWe must all insist on ethical behavior or we will kill the golden goose,\u201d Mr. Kohlberg said at his last investor conference at K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company has raised $5 billion from investors since its inception, having struck $10 billion worth of deals in its own right.", "answer": "James Kohlberg", "sentence": "( James Kohlberg is a board member of The New York Times Company.)", "paragraph_sentence": "Unable to come to an agreement on a role at the firm where he served as senior founding partner, Mr. Kohlberg left to form his own investment firm, Kohlberg & Company, in 1987, with his son James as co-founder. ( James Kohlberg is a board member of The New York Times Company.) \u201cWe must all insist on ethical behavior or we will kill the golden goose,\u201d Mr. Kohlberg said at his last investor conference at K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company has raised $5 billion from investors since its inception, having struck $10 billion worth of deals in its own right.", "paragraph_answer": "Unable to come to an agreement on a role at the firm where he served as senior founding partner, Mr. Kohlberg left to form his own investment firm, Kohlberg & Company, in 1987, with his son James as co-founder. ( James Kohlberg is a board member of The New York Times Company.) \u201cWe must all insist on ethical behavior or we will kill the golden goose,\u201d Mr. Kohlberg said at his last investor conference at K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company has raised $5 billion from investors since its inception, having struck $10 billion worth of deals in its own right.", "sentence_answer": "( James Kohlberg is a board member of The New York Times Company.)"} +{"question": "What is the value of the deals K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company has struck?", "paragraph": "Unable to come to an agreement on a role at the firm where he served as senior founding partner, Mr. Kohlberg left to form his own investment firm, Kohlberg & Company, in 1987, with his son James as co-founder. (James Kohlberg is a board member of The New York Times Company.) \u201cWe must all insist on ethical behavior or we will kill the golden goose,\u201d Mr. Kohlberg said at his last investor conference at K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company has raised $5 billion from investors since its inception, having struck $10 billion worth of deals in its own right.", "answer": "$10 billion", "sentence": "\u201cWe must all insist on ethical behavior or we will kill the golden goose,\u201d Mr. Kohlberg said at his last investor conference at K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company has raised $5 billion from investors since its inception, having struck $10 billion worth of deals in its own right.", "paragraph_sentence": "Unable to come to an agreement on a role at the firm where he served as senior founding partner, Mr. Kohlberg left to form his own investment firm, Kohlberg & Company, in 1987, with his son James as co-founder. (James Kohlberg is a board member of The New York Times Company.) \u201cWe must all insist on ethical behavior or we will kill the golden goose,\u201d Mr. Kohlberg said at his last investor conference at K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company has raised $5 billion from investors since its inception, having struck $10 billion worth of deals in its own right. ", "paragraph_answer": "Unable to come to an agreement on a role at the firm where he served as senior founding partner, Mr. Kohlberg left to form his own investment firm, Kohlberg & Company, in 1987, with his son James as co-founder. (James Kohlberg is a board member of The New York Times Company.) \u201cWe must all insist on ethical behavior or we will kill the golden goose,\u201d Mr. Kohlberg said at his last investor conference at K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company has raised $5 billion from investors since its inception, having struck $10 billion worth of deals in its own right.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe must all insist on ethical behavior or we will kill the golden goose,\u201d Mr. Kohlberg said at his last investor conference at K.K.R. Kohlberg & Company has raised $5 billion from investors since its inception, having struck $10 billion worth of deals in its own right."} +{"question": "When did Jerome Kohlberg retire?", "paragraph": "Upon his retirement from Kohlberg & Company in 1994, Jerome Kohlberg focused in large part on philanthropy, including efforts to provide education for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws, lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002. \u201cJerry was a real visionary, having played an important role in developing the private equity model in the 1960\u2019s, and he was a true mentor to George Roberts and me,\u201d Mr. Kravis said in a statement. \u201cHenry and I are proud that our firm\u2019s name is Kohlberg Kravis Roberts,\u201d Mr. Roberts said. \u201cJerry will be missed and remembered by many.\u201d In addition to his son James, Mr. Kohlberg is survived by his wife, Nancy; three other children, Karen, Pamela and Andrew; 12 grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.", "answer": "1994", "sentence": "Upon his retirement from Kohlberg & Company in 1994 , Jerome Kohlberg focused in large part on philanthropy, including efforts to provide education for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.", "paragraph_sentence": " Upon his retirement from Kohlberg & Company in 1994 , Jerome Kohlberg focused in large part on philanthropy, including efforts to provide education for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws, lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002. \u201cJerry was a real visionary, having played an important role in developing the private equity model in the 1960\u2019s, and he was a true mentor to George Roberts and me,\u201d Mr. Kravis said in a statement. \u201cHenry and I are proud that our firm\u2019s name is Kohlberg Kravis Roberts,\u201d Mr. Roberts said. \u201cJerry will be missed and remembered by many.\u201d In addition to his son James, Mr. Kohlberg is survived by his wife, Nancy; three other children, Karen, Pamela and Andrew; 12 grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.", "paragraph_answer": "Upon his retirement from Kohlberg & Company in 1994 , Jerome Kohlberg focused in large part on philanthropy, including efforts to provide education for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws, lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002. \u201cJerry was a real visionary, having played an important role in developing the private equity model in the 1960\u2019s, and he was a true mentor to George Roberts and me,\u201d Mr. Kravis said in a statement. \u201cHenry and I are proud that our firm\u2019s name is Kohlberg Kravis Roberts,\u201d Mr. Roberts said. \u201cJerry will be missed and remembered by many.\u201d In addition to his son James, Mr. Kohlberg is survived by his wife, Nancy; three other children, Karen, Pamela and Andrew; 12 grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.", "sentence_answer": "Upon his retirement from Kohlberg & Company in 1994 , Jerome Kohlberg focused in large part on philanthropy, including efforts to provide education for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan."} +{"question": "What types of laws did Jerome Kohlberg support efforts to overhaul?", "paragraph": "Upon his retirement from Kohlberg & Company in 1994, Jerome Kohlberg focused in large part on philanthropy, including efforts to provide education for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws, lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002. \u201cJerry was a real visionary, having played an important role in developing the private equity model in the 1960\u2019s, and he was a true mentor to George Roberts and me,\u201d Mr. Kravis said in a statement. \u201cHenry and I are proud that our firm\u2019s name is Kohlberg Kravis Roberts,\u201d Mr. Roberts said. \u201cJerry will be missed and remembered by many.\u201d In addition to his son James, Mr. Kohlberg is survived by his wife, Nancy; three other children, Karen, Pamela and Andrew; 12 grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.", "answer": "campaign finance laws", "sentence": "He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws , lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002.", "paragraph_sentence": "Upon his retirement from Kohlberg & Company in 1994, Jerome Kohlberg focused in large part on philanthropy, including efforts to provide education for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws , lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002. \u201cJerry was a real visionary, having played an important role in developing the private equity model in the 1960\u2019s, and he was a true mentor to George Roberts and me,\u201d Mr. Kravis said in a statement. \u201cHenry and I are proud that our firm\u2019s name is Kohlberg Kravis Roberts,\u201d Mr. Roberts said. \u201cJerry will be missed and remembered by many.\u201d In addition to his son James, Mr. Kohlberg is survived by his wife, Nancy; three other children, Karen, Pamela and Andrew; 12 grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.", "paragraph_answer": "Upon his retirement from Kohlberg & Company in 1994, Jerome Kohlberg focused in large part on philanthropy, including efforts to provide education for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws , lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002. \u201cJerry was a real visionary, having played an important role in developing the private equity model in the 1960\u2019s, and he was a true mentor to George Roberts and me,\u201d Mr. Kravis said in a statement. \u201cHenry and I are proud that our firm\u2019s name is Kohlberg Kravis Roberts,\u201d Mr. Roberts said. \u201cJerry will be missed and remembered by many.\u201d In addition to his son James, Mr. Kohlberg is survived by his wife, Nancy; three other children, Karen, Pamela and Andrew; 12 grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.", "sentence_answer": "He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws , lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002."} +{"question": "What did Jerome Kohlberg focus on after retirement?", "paragraph": "Upon his retirement from Kohlberg & Company in 1994, Jerome Kohlberg focused in large part on philanthropy, including efforts to provide education for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws, lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002. \u201cJerry was a real visionary, having played an important role in developing the private equity model in the 1960\u2019s, and he was a true mentor to George Roberts and me,\u201d Mr. Kravis said in a statement. \u201cHenry and I are proud that our firm\u2019s name is Kohlberg Kravis Roberts,\u201d Mr. Roberts said. \u201cJerry will be missed and remembered by many.\u201d In addition to his son James, Mr. Kohlberg is survived by his wife, Nancy; three other children, Karen, Pamela and Andrew; 12 grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.", "answer": "philanthropy", "sentence": "Upon his retirement from Kohlberg & Company in 1994, Jerome Kohlberg focused in large part on philanthropy , including efforts to provide education for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.", "paragraph_sentence": " Upon his retirement from Kohlberg & Company in 1994, Jerome Kohlberg focused in large part on philanthropy , including efforts to provide education for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws, lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002. \u201cJerry was a real visionary, having played an important role in developing the private equity model in the 1960\u2019s, and he was a true mentor to George Roberts and me,\u201d Mr. Kravis said in a statement. \u201cHenry and I are proud that our firm\u2019s name is Kohlberg Kravis Roberts,\u201d Mr. Roberts said. \u201cJerry will be missed and remembered by many.\u201d In addition to his son James, Mr. Kohlberg is survived by his wife, Nancy; three other children, Karen, Pamela and Andrew; 12 grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.", "paragraph_answer": "Upon his retirement from Kohlberg & Company in 1994, Jerome Kohlberg focused in large part on philanthropy , including efforts to provide education for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws, lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002. \u201cJerry was a real visionary, having played an important role in developing the private equity model in the 1960\u2019s, and he was a true mentor to George Roberts and me,\u201d Mr. Kravis said in a statement. \u201cHenry and I are proud that our firm\u2019s name is Kohlberg Kravis Roberts,\u201d Mr. Roberts said. \u201cJerry will be missed and remembered by many.\u201d In addition to his son James, Mr. Kohlberg is survived by his wife, Nancy; three other children, Karen, Pamela and Andrew; 12 grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.", "sentence_answer": "Upon his retirement from Kohlberg & Company in 1994, Jerome Kohlberg focused in large part on philanthropy , including efforts to provide education for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan."} +{"question": "What law did Jerome Kohlberg back?", "paragraph": "Upon his retirement from Kohlberg & Company in 1994, Jerome Kohlberg focused in large part on philanthropy, including efforts to provide education for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws, lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002. \u201cJerry was a real visionary, having played an important role in developing the private equity model in the 1960\u2019s, and he was a true mentor to George Roberts and me,\u201d Mr. Kravis said in a statement. \u201cHenry and I are proud that our firm\u2019s name is Kohlberg Kravis Roberts,\u201d Mr. Roberts said. \u201cJerry will be missed and remembered by many.\u201d In addition to his son James, Mr. Kohlberg is survived by his wife, Nancy; three other children, Karen, Pamela and Andrew; 12 grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.", "answer": "McCain-Feingold", "sentence": "He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws, lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002", "paragraph_sentence": "Upon his retirement from Kohlberg & Company in 1994, Jerome Kohlberg focused in large part on philanthropy, including efforts to provide education for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws, lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002 . \u201cJerry was a real visionary, having played an important role in developing the private equity model in the 1960\u2019s, and he was a true mentor to George Roberts and me,\u201d Mr. Kravis said in a statement. \u201cHenry and I are proud that our firm\u2019s name is Kohlberg Kravis Roberts,\u201d Mr. Roberts said. \u201cJerry will be missed and remembered by many.\u201d In addition to his son James, Mr. Kohlberg is survived by his wife, Nancy; three other children, Karen, Pamela and Andrew; 12 grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.", "paragraph_answer": "Upon his retirement from Kohlberg & Company in 1994, Jerome Kohlberg focused in large part on philanthropy, including efforts to provide education for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws, lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002. \u201cJerry was a real visionary, having played an important role in developing the private equity model in the 1960\u2019s, and he was a true mentor to George Roberts and me,\u201d Mr. Kravis said in a statement. \u201cHenry and I are proud that our firm\u2019s name is Kohlberg Kravis Roberts,\u201d Mr. Roberts said. \u201cJerry will be missed and remembered by many.\u201d In addition to his son James, Mr. Kohlberg is survived by his wife, Nancy; three other children, Karen, Pamela and Andrew; 12 grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.", "sentence_answer": "He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws, lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002"} +{"question": "When was the McCain-Feingold legislation passed?", "paragraph": "Upon his retirement from Kohlberg & Company in 1994, Jerome Kohlberg focused in large part on philanthropy, including efforts to provide education for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws, lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002. \u201cJerry was a real visionary, having played an important role in developing the private equity model in the 1960\u2019s, and he was a true mentor to George Roberts and me,\u201d Mr. Kravis said in a statement. \u201cHenry and I are proud that our firm\u2019s name is Kohlberg Kravis Roberts,\u201d Mr. Roberts said. \u201cJerry will be missed and remembered by many.\u201d In addition to his son James, Mr. Kohlberg is survived by his wife, Nancy; three other children, Karen, Pamela and Andrew; 12 grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.", "answer": "2002", "sentence": "He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws, lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002 .", "paragraph_sentence": "Upon his retirement from Kohlberg & Company in 1994, Jerome Kohlberg focused in large part on philanthropy, including efforts to provide education for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws, lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002 . \u201cJerry was a real visionary, having played an important role in developing the private equity model in the 1960\u2019s, and he was a true mentor to George Roberts and me,\u201d Mr. Kravis said in a statement. \u201cHenry and I are proud that our firm\u2019s name is Kohlberg Kravis Roberts,\u201d Mr. Roberts said. \u201cJerry will be missed and remembered by many.\u201d In addition to his son James, Mr. Kohlberg is survived by his wife, Nancy; three other children, Karen, Pamela and Andrew; 12 grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.", "paragraph_answer": "Upon his retirement from Kohlberg & Company in 1994, Jerome Kohlberg focused in large part on philanthropy, including efforts to provide education for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws, lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002 . \u201cJerry was a real visionary, having played an important role in developing the private equity model in the 1960\u2019s, and he was a true mentor to George Roberts and me,\u201d Mr. Kravis said in a statement. \u201cHenry and I are proud that our firm\u2019s name is Kohlberg Kravis Roberts,\u201d Mr. Roberts said. \u201cJerry will be missed and remembered by many.\u201d In addition to his son James, Mr. Kohlberg is survived by his wife, Nancy; three other children, Karen, Pamela and Andrew; 12 grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.", "sentence_answer": "He also supported efforts to overhaul campaign finance laws, lending his backing to the McCain-Feingold legislation that passed in 2002 ."} +{"question": "What task might be difficult for the parents of first-generation students?", "paragraph": "\u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses,\u201d said Basti Lopez, who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May. She had started at Santa Ana College, a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer. She was admitted to Berkeley, Irvine and Santa Cruz and chose Irvine, both because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home. She is now back working at Santa Ana, helping students with the transfer process, and she\u2019s studying for the law-school admission exam, hoping to become an immigration lawyer.", "answer": "how to help their child prepare for college expenses", "sentence": "\u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses ,\u201d said Basti Lopez, who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses ,\u201d said Basti Lopez, who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May. She had started at Santa Ana College, a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer. She was admitted to Berkeley, Irvine and Santa Cruz and chose Irvine, both because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home. She is now back working at Santa Ana, helping students with the transfer process, and she\u2019s studying for the law-school admission exam, hoping to become an immigration lawyer.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses ,\u201d said Basti Lopez, who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May. She had started at Santa Ana College, a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer. She was admitted to Berkeley, Irvine and Santa Cruz and chose Irvine, both because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home. She is now back working at Santa Ana, helping students with the transfer process, and she\u2019s studying for the law-school admission exam, hoping to become an immigration lawyer.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses ,\u201d said Basti Lopez, who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May."} +{"question": "Who graduated from Irvine after immigrating from Mexico as a youth?", "paragraph": "\u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses,\u201d said Basti Lopez, who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May. She had started at Santa Ana College, a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer. She was admitted to Berkeley, Irvine and Santa Cruz and chose Irvine, both because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home. She is now back working at Santa Ana, helping students with the transfer process, and she\u2019s studying for the law-school admission exam, hoping to become an immigration lawyer.", "answer": "Basti Lopez", "sentence": "\u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses,\u201d said Basti Lopez , who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses,\u201d said Basti Lopez , who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May. She had started at Santa Ana College, a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer. She was admitted to Berkeley, Irvine and Santa Cruz and chose Irvine, both because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home. She is now back working at Santa Ana, helping students with the transfer process, and she\u2019s studying for the law-school admission exam, hoping to become an immigration lawyer.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses,\u201d said Basti Lopez , who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May. She had started at Santa Ana College, a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer. She was admitted to Berkeley, Irvine and Santa Cruz and chose Irvine, both because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home. She is now back working at Santa Ana, helping students with the transfer process, and she\u2019s studying for the law-school admission exam, hoping to become an immigration lawyer.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses,\u201d said Basti Lopez , who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May."} +{"question": "Where did Basti Lopez first began attending college?", "paragraph": "\u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses,\u201d said Basti Lopez, who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May. She had started at Santa Ana College, a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer. She was admitted to Berkeley, Irvine and Santa Cruz and chose Irvine, both because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home. She is now back working at Santa Ana, helping students with the transfer process, and she\u2019s studying for the law-school admission exam, hoping to become an immigration lawyer.", "answer": "Santa Ana College", "sentence": "She had started at Santa Ana College , a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses,\u201d said Basti Lopez, who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May. She had started at Santa Ana College , a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer. She was admitted to Berkeley, Irvine and Santa Cruz and chose Irvine, both because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home. She is now back working at Santa Ana, helping students with the transfer process, and she\u2019s studying for the law-school admission exam, hoping to become an immigration lawyer.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses,\u201d said Basti Lopez, who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May. She had started at Santa Ana College , a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer. She was admitted to Berkeley, Irvine and Santa Cruz and chose Irvine, both because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home. She is now back working at Santa Ana, helping students with the transfer process, and she\u2019s studying for the law-school admission exam, hoping to become an immigration lawyer.", "sentence_answer": "She had started at Santa Ana College , a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer."} +{"question": "Why did Basti Lopez decide to attend Irvine over other schools?", "paragraph": "\u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses,\u201d said Basti Lopez, who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May. She had started at Santa Ana College, a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer. She was admitted to Berkeley, Irvine and Santa Cruz and chose Irvine, both because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home. She is now back working at Santa Ana, helping students with the transfer process, and she\u2019s studying for the law-school admission exam, hoping to become an immigration lawyer.", "answer": "because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home", "sentence": "She was admitted to Berkeley, Irvine and Santa Cruz and chose Irvine, both because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses,\u201d said Basti Lopez, who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May. She had started at Santa Ana College, a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer. She was admitted to Berkeley, Irvine and Santa Cruz and chose Irvine, both because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home . She is now back working at Santa Ana, helping students with the transfer process, and she\u2019s studying for the law-school admission exam, hoping to become an immigration lawyer.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses,\u201d said Basti Lopez, who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May. She had started at Santa Ana College, a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer. She was admitted to Berkeley, Irvine and Santa Cruz and chose Irvine, both because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home . She is now back working at Santa Ana, helping students with the transfer process, and she\u2019s studying for the law-school admission exam, hoping to become an immigration lawyer.", "sentence_answer": "She was admitted to Berkeley, Irvine and Santa Cruz and chose Irvine, both because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home ."} +{"question": "What is Basti Lopez currently studying for?", "paragraph": "\u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses,\u201d said Basti Lopez, who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May. She had started at Santa Ana College, a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer. She was admitted to Berkeley, Irvine and Santa Cruz and chose Irvine, both because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home. She is now back working at Santa Ana, helping students with the transfer process, and she\u2019s studying for the law-school admission exam, hoping to become an immigration lawyer.", "answer": "the law-school admission exam", "sentence": "She is now back working at Santa Ana, helping students with the transfer process, and she\u2019s studying for the law-school admission exam , hoping to become an immigration lawyer.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses,\u201d said Basti Lopez, who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May. She had started at Santa Ana College, a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer. She was admitted to Berkeley, Irvine and Santa Cruz and chose Irvine, both because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home. She is now back working at Santa Ana, helping students with the transfer process, and she\u2019s studying for the law-school admission exam , hoping to become an immigration lawyer. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cFor a lot of first-generation students, it\u2019s very hard for parents to understand how to help their child prepare for college expenses,\u201d said Basti Lopez, who emigrated with her parents from Mexico as a child and graduated from Irvine in May. She had started at Santa Ana College, a two-year college, before applying to four-year colleges as a junior transfer. She was admitted to Berkeley, Irvine and Santa Cruz and chose Irvine, both because of the financial-aid package and because it was closer to home. She is now back working at Santa Ana, helping students with the transfer process, and she\u2019s studying for the law-school admission exam , hoping to become an immigration lawyer.", "sentence_answer": "She is now back working at Santa Ana, helping students with the transfer process, and she\u2019s studying for the law-school admission exam , hoping to become an immigration lawyer."} +{"question": "Which college's student body has more pupils with Pell grants than all the ivy league schools put together?", "paragraph": "Students like Ms. Lopez are one reason that Irvine\u2019s student body includes more students with Pell grants than all eight colleges of the Ivy League combined. It\u2019s true that the California colleges have a built-in advantage: the many high-performing students from immigrant families who live there. But that\u2019s hardly the only reason for the economic diversity. The University of California\u2019s aggressive steps to recruit, admit, enroll and support low-income students are also crucial. \u201cIt takes a lot of systematic effort,\u201d Mr. Gillman, the Irvine chancellor, said. And yet American society seems to be making less of this broad effort than it once did.", "answer": "Irvine\u2019s", "sentence": "Students like Ms. Lopez are one reason that Irvine\u2019s student body includes more students with Pell grants than all eight colleges of the Ivy League combined.", "paragraph_sentence": " Students like Ms. Lopez are one reason that Irvine\u2019s student body includes more students with Pell grants than all eight colleges of the Ivy League combined. It\u2019s true that the California colleges have a built-in advantage: the many high-performing students from immigrant families who live there. But that\u2019s hardly the only reason for the economic diversity. The University of California\u2019s aggressive steps to recruit, admit, enroll and support low-income students are also crucial. \u201cIt takes a lot of systematic effort,\u201d Mr. Gillman, the Irvine chancellor, said. And yet American society seems to be making less of this broad effort than it once did.", "paragraph_answer": "Students like Ms. Lopez are one reason that Irvine\u2019s student body includes more students with Pell grants than all eight colleges of the Ivy League combined. It\u2019s true that the California colleges have a built-in advantage: the many high-performing students from immigrant families who live there. But that\u2019s hardly the only reason for the economic diversity. The University of California\u2019s aggressive steps to recruit, admit, enroll and support low-income students are also crucial. \u201cIt takes a lot of systematic effort,\u201d Mr. Gillman, the Irvine chancellor, said. And yet American society seems to be making less of this broad effort than it once did.", "sentence_answer": "Students like Ms. Lopez are one reason that Irvine\u2019s student body includes more students with Pell grants than all eight colleges of the Ivy League combined."} +{"question": "What is a big advantage that schools in California possess?", "paragraph": "Students like Ms. Lopez are one reason that Irvine\u2019s student body includes more students with Pell grants than all eight colleges of the Ivy League combined. It\u2019s true that the California colleges have a built-in advantage: the many high-performing students from immigrant families who live there. But that\u2019s hardly the only reason for the economic diversity. The University of California\u2019s aggressive steps to recruit, admit, enroll and support low-income students are also crucial. \u201cIt takes a lot of systematic effort,\u201d Mr. Gillman, the Irvine chancellor, said. And yet American society seems to be making less of this broad effort than it once did.", "answer": "University of California", "sentence": "The University of California \u2019s aggressive steps to recruit, admit, enroll and support low-income students are also crucial.", "paragraph_sentence": "Students like Ms. Lopez are one reason that Irvine\u2019s student body includes more students with Pell grants than all eight colleges of the Ivy League combined. It\u2019s true that the California colleges have a built-in advantage: the many high-performing students from immigrant families who live there. But that\u2019s hardly the only reason for the economic diversity. The University of California \u2019s aggressive steps to recruit, admit, enroll and support low-income students are also crucial. \u201cIt takes a lot of systematic effort,\u201d Mr. Gillman, the Irvine chancellor, said. And yet American society seems to be making less of this broad effort than it once did.", "paragraph_answer": "Students like Ms. Lopez are one reason that Irvine\u2019s student body includes more students with Pell grants than all eight colleges of the Ivy League combined. It\u2019s true that the California colleges have a built-in advantage: the many high-performing students from immigrant families who live there. But that\u2019s hardly the only reason for the economic diversity. The University of California \u2019s aggressive steps to recruit, admit, enroll and support low-income students are also crucial. \u201cIt takes a lot of systematic effort,\u201d Mr. Gillman, the Irvine chancellor, said. And yet American society seems to be making less of this broad effort than it once did.", "sentence_answer": "The University of California \u2019s aggressive steps to recruit, admit, enroll and support low-income students are also crucial."} +{"question": "Who has the University of California been aggressive in pursuing?", "paragraph": "Students like Ms. Lopez are one reason that Irvine\u2019s student body includes more students with Pell grants than all eight colleges of the Ivy League combined. It\u2019s true that the California colleges have a built-in advantage: the many high-performing students from immigrant families who live there. But that\u2019s hardly the only reason for the economic diversity. The University of California\u2019s aggressive steps to recruit, admit, enroll and support low-income students are also crucial. \u201cIt takes a lot of systematic effort,\u201d Mr. Gillman, the Irvine chancellor, said. And yet American society seems to be making less of this broad effort than it once did.", "answer": "low-income students", "sentence": "The University of California\u2019s aggressive steps to recruit, admit, enroll and support low-income students are also crucial.", "paragraph_sentence": "Students like Ms. Lopez are one reason that Irvine\u2019s student body includes more students with Pell grants than all eight colleges of the Ivy League combined. It\u2019s true that the California colleges have a built-in advantage: the many high-performing students from immigrant families who live there. But that\u2019s hardly the only reason for the economic diversity. The University of California\u2019s aggressive steps to recruit, admit, enroll and support low-income students are also crucial. \u201cIt takes a lot of systematic effort,\u201d Mr. Gillman, the Irvine chancellor, said. And yet American society seems to be making less of this broad effort than it once did.", "paragraph_answer": "Students like Ms. Lopez are one reason that Irvine\u2019s student body includes more students with Pell grants than all eight colleges of the Ivy League combined. It\u2019s true that the California colleges have a built-in advantage: the many high-performing students from immigrant families who live there. But that\u2019s hardly the only reason for the economic diversity. The University of California\u2019s aggressive steps to recruit, admit, enroll and support low-income students are also crucial. \u201cIt takes a lot of systematic effort,\u201d Mr. Gillman, the Irvine chancellor, said. And yet American society seems to be making less of this broad effort than it once did.", "sentence_answer": "The University of California\u2019s aggressive steps to recruit, admit, enroll and support low-income students are also crucial."} +{"question": "What is the name of the chancellor for Irvine?", "paragraph": "Students like Ms. Lopez are one reason that Irvine\u2019s student body includes more students with Pell grants than all eight colleges of the Ivy League combined. It\u2019s true that the California colleges have a built-in advantage: the many high-performing students from immigrant families who live there. But that\u2019s hardly the only reason for the economic diversity. The University of California\u2019s aggressive steps to recruit, admit, enroll and support low-income students are also crucial. \u201cIt takes a lot of systematic effort,\u201d Mr. Gillman, the Irvine chancellor, said. And yet American society seems to be making less of this broad effort than it once did.", "answer": "Mr. Gillman", "sentence": "\u201cIt takes a lot of systematic effort,\u201d Mr. Gillman , the Irvine chancellor, said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Students like Ms. Lopez are one reason that Irvine\u2019s student body includes more students with Pell grants than all eight colleges of the Ivy League combined. It\u2019s true that the California colleges have a built-in advantage: the many high-performing students from immigrant families who live there. But that\u2019s hardly the only reason for the economic diversity. The University of California\u2019s aggressive steps to recruit, admit, enroll and support low-income students are also crucial. \u201cIt takes a lot of systematic effort,\u201d Mr. Gillman , the Irvine chancellor, said. And yet American society seems to be making less of this broad effort than it once did.", "paragraph_answer": "Students like Ms. Lopez are one reason that Irvine\u2019s student body includes more students with Pell grants than all eight colleges of the Ivy League combined. It\u2019s true that the California colleges have a built-in advantage: the many high-performing students from immigrant families who live there. But that\u2019s hardly the only reason for the economic diversity. The University of California\u2019s aggressive steps to recruit, admit, enroll and support low-income students are also crucial. \u201cIt takes a lot of systematic effort,\u201d Mr. Gillman , the Irvine chancellor, said. And yet American society seems to be making less of this broad effort than it once did.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt takes a lot of systematic effort,\u201d Mr. Gillman , the Irvine chancellor, said."} +{"question": "How many Ivy League colleges are there?", "paragraph": "Students like Ms. Lopez are one reason that Irvine\u2019s student body includes more students with Pell grants than all eight colleges of the Ivy League combined. It\u2019s true that the California colleges have a built-in advantage: the many high-performing students from immigrant families who live there. But that\u2019s hardly the only reason for the economic diversity. The University of California\u2019s aggressive steps to recruit, admit, enroll and support low-income students are also crucial. \u201cIt takes a lot of systematic effort,\u201d Mr. Gillman, the Irvine chancellor, said. And yet American society seems to be making less of this broad effort than it once did.", "answer": "eight", "sentence": "Students like Ms. Lopez are one reason that Irvine\u2019s student body includes more students with Pell grants than all eight colleges of the Ivy League combined.", "paragraph_sentence": " Students like Ms. Lopez are one reason that Irvine\u2019s student body includes more students with Pell grants than all eight colleges of the Ivy League combined. It\u2019s true that the California colleges have a built-in advantage: the many high-performing students from immigrant families who live there. But that\u2019s hardly the only reason for the economic diversity. The University of California\u2019s aggressive steps to recruit, admit, enroll and support low-income students are also crucial. \u201cIt takes a lot of systematic effort,\u201d Mr. Gillman, the Irvine chancellor, said. And yet American society seems to be making less of this broad effort than it once did.", "paragraph_answer": "Students like Ms. Lopez are one reason that Irvine\u2019s student body includes more students with Pell grants than all eight colleges of the Ivy League combined. It\u2019s true that the California colleges have a built-in advantage: the many high-performing students from immigrant families who live there. But that\u2019s hardly the only reason for the economic diversity. The University of California\u2019s aggressive steps to recruit, admit, enroll and support low-income students are also crucial. \u201cIt takes a lot of systematic effort,\u201d Mr. Gillman, the Irvine chancellor, said. And yet American society seems to be making less of this broad effort than it once did.", "sentence_answer": "Students like Ms. Lopez are one reason that Irvine\u2019s student body includes more students with Pell grants than all eight colleges of the Ivy League combined."} +{"question": "Is state funding in California going up or down?", "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": "the University of California", "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."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What type of education is likely to positively influence economic mobility and success?", "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": "college education", "sentence": "All the while, a college education remains the most reliable ticket to the middle class and beyond.", "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": "All the while, a college education remains the most reliable ticket to the middle class and beyond."} +{"question": "What is the rate of unemployment for college graduates?", "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": "2.7 percent", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "How does the educational gap between the poor and wealthy differ outside of California as compared to inside?", "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": "much wider", "sentence": "Outside California, the educational gap between rich and poor is much wider \u2013 and not narrowing very rapidly.", "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": "Outside California, the educational gap between rich and poor is much wider \u2013 and not narrowing very rapidly."} +{"question": "Who is Mr. Ingrasselino?", "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": "a police officer and chief", "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.", "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": "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."} +{"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 ."} +{"question": "When did Mr. Ingrasselino retired?", "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": "in 2012.", "sentence": "\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.", "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 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."} +{"question": "How is considered the crossing 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": "most dangerous in the country", "sentence": "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", "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": "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"} +{"question": "What named was given to the crossing by the Federal Railroad Administration?", "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": "\u201caccident prediction value.\u201d", "sentence": "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_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": "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."} +{"question": "How many accidents since 1975?", "paragraph": "The Midland crossing has been the site of 29 accidents since 1975, according to the railroad agency\u2019s data. Two people have been killed and six more injured. The Metro-North Railroad crash last week, in which six people were killed when a train plowed into a sport-utility vehicle at a grade crossing in Westchester County, N.Y., cast renewed attention on the constantly lurking danger posed by the mixing of cars, trains and human nature at the tens of thousands of rail crossings across the country. Over the last week, reporters for The New York Times visited the 10 crossings that the railroad administration\u2019s accident-prediction algorithm deems the most likely sites for crashes in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut \u2014 to examine their configurations and talk to people about the safety concerns.", "answer": "29", "sentence": "The Midland crossing has been the site of 29 accidents since 1975, according to the railroad agency\u2019s data.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Midland crossing has been the site of 29 accidents since 1975, according to the railroad agency\u2019s data. Two people have been killed and six more injured. The Metro-North Railroad crash last week, in which six people were killed when a train plowed into a sport-utility vehicle at a grade crossing in Westchester County, N.Y., cast renewed attention on the constantly lurking danger posed by the mixing of cars, trains and human nature at the tens of thousands of rail crossings across the country. Over the last week, reporters for The New York Times visited the 10 crossings that the railroad administration\u2019s accident-prediction algorithm deems the most likely sites for crashes in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut \u2014 to examine their configurations and talk to people about the safety concerns.", "paragraph_answer": "The Midland crossing has been the site of 29 accidents since 1975, according to the railroad agency\u2019s data. Two people have been killed and six more injured. The Metro-North Railroad crash last week, in which six people were killed when a train plowed into a sport-utility vehicle at a grade crossing in Westchester County, N.Y., cast renewed attention on the constantly lurking danger posed by the mixing of cars, trains and human nature at the tens of thousands of rail crossings across the country. Over the last week, reporters for The New York Times visited the 10 crossings that the railroad administration\u2019s accident-prediction algorithm deems the most likely sites for crashes in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut \u2014 to examine their configurations and talk to people about the safety concerns.", "sentence_answer": "The Midland crossing has been the site of 29 accidents since 1975, according to the railroad agency\u2019s data."} +{"question": "Who confirmed the number of accidents?", "paragraph": "The Midland crossing has been the site of 29 accidents since 1975, according to the railroad agency\u2019s data. Two people have been killed and six more injured. The Metro-North Railroad crash last week, in which six people were killed when a train plowed into a sport-utility vehicle at a grade crossing in Westchester County, N.Y., cast renewed attention on the constantly lurking danger posed by the mixing of cars, trains and human nature at the tens of thousands of rail crossings across the country. Over the last week, reporters for The New York Times visited the 10 crossings that the railroad administration\u2019s accident-prediction algorithm deems the most likely sites for crashes in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut \u2014 to examine their configurations and talk to people about the safety concerns.", "answer": "the railroad agency\u2019s data", "sentence": "The Midland crossing has been the site of 29 accidents since 1975, according to the railroad agency\u2019s data .", "paragraph_sentence": " The Midland crossing has been the site of 29 accidents since 1975, according to the railroad agency\u2019s data . Two people have been killed and six more injured. The Metro-North Railroad crash last week, in which six people were killed when a train plowed into a sport-utility vehicle at a grade crossing in Westchester County, N.Y., cast renewed attention on the constantly lurking danger posed by the mixing of cars, trains and human nature at the tens of thousands of rail crossings across the country. Over the last week, reporters for The New York Times visited the 10 crossings that the railroad administration\u2019s accident-prediction algorithm deems the most likely sites for crashes in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut \u2014 to examine their configurations and talk to people about the safety concerns.", "paragraph_answer": "The Midland crossing has been the site of 29 accidents since 1975, according to the railroad agency\u2019s data . Two people have been killed and six more injured. The Metro-North Railroad crash last week, in which six people were killed when a train plowed into a sport-utility vehicle at a grade crossing in Westchester County, N.Y., cast renewed attention on the constantly lurking danger posed by the mixing of cars, trains and human nature at the tens of thousands of rail crossings across the country. Over the last week, reporters for The New York Times visited the 10 crossings that the railroad administration\u2019s accident-prediction algorithm deems the most likely sites for crashes in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut \u2014 to examine their configurations and talk to people about the safety concerns.", "sentence_answer": "The Midland crossing has been the site of 29 accidents since 1975, according to the railroad agency\u2019s data ."} +{"question": "What mean of transformation crashed last night?", "paragraph": "The Midland crossing has been the site of 29 accidents since 1975, according to the railroad agency\u2019s data. Two people have been killed and six more injured. The Metro-North Railroad crash last week, in which six people were killed when a train plowed into a sport-utility vehicle at a grade crossing in Westchester County, N.Y., cast renewed attention on the constantly lurking danger posed by the mixing of cars, trains and human nature at the tens of thousands of rail crossings across the country. Over the last week, reporters for The New York Times visited the 10 crossings that the railroad administration\u2019s accident-prediction algorithm deems the most likely sites for crashes in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut \u2014 to examine their configurations and talk to people about the safety concerns.", "answer": "Metro-North Railroad", "sentence": "The Metro-North Railroad crash last week, in which six people were killed when a train plowed into a sport-utility vehicle at a grade crossing in Westchester County, N.Y., cast renewed attention on the constantly lurking danger posed by the mixing of cars, trains and human nature at the tens of thousands of rail crossings across the country.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Midland crossing has been the site of 29 accidents since 1975, according to the railroad agency\u2019s data. Two people have been killed and six more injured. The Metro-North Railroad crash last week, in which six people were killed when a train plowed into a sport-utility vehicle at a grade crossing in Westchester County, N.Y., cast renewed attention on the constantly lurking danger posed by the mixing of cars, trains and human nature at the tens of thousands of rail crossings across the country. Over the last week, reporters for The New York Times visited the 10 crossings that the railroad administration\u2019s accident-prediction algorithm deems the most likely sites for crashes in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut \u2014 to examine their configurations and talk to people about the safety concerns.", "paragraph_answer": "The Midland crossing has been the site of 29 accidents since 1975, according to the railroad agency\u2019s data. Two people have been killed and six more injured. The Metro-North Railroad crash last week, in which six people were killed when a train plowed into a sport-utility vehicle at a grade crossing in Westchester County, N.Y., cast renewed attention on the constantly lurking danger posed by the mixing of cars, trains and human nature at the tens of thousands of rail crossings across the country. Over the last week, reporters for The New York Times visited the 10 crossings that the railroad administration\u2019s accident-prediction algorithm deems the most likely sites for crashes in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut \u2014 to examine their configurations and talk to people about the safety concerns.", "sentence_answer": "The Metro-North Railroad crash last week, in which six people were killed when a train plowed into a sport-utility vehicle at a grade crossing in Westchester County, N.Y., cast renewed attention on the constantly lurking danger posed by the mixing of cars, trains and human nature at the tens of thousands of rail crossings across the country."} +{"question": "How many people were killed when a train plowed into a sport-utility?", "paragraph": "The Midland crossing has been the site of 29 accidents since 1975, according to the railroad agency\u2019s data. Two people have been killed and six more injured. The Metro-North Railroad crash last week, in which six people were killed when a train plowed into a sport-utility vehicle at a grade crossing in Westchester County, N.Y., cast renewed attention on the constantly lurking danger posed by the mixing of cars, trains and human nature at the tens of thousands of rail crossings across the country. Over the last week, reporters for The New York Times visited the 10 crossings that the railroad administration\u2019s accident-prediction algorithm deems the most likely sites for crashes in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut \u2014 to examine their configurations and talk to people about the safety concerns.", "answer": "six", "sentence": "Two people have been killed and six more injured.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Midland crossing has been the site of 29 accidents since 1975, according to the railroad agency\u2019s data. Two people have been killed and six more injured. The Metro-North Railroad crash last week, in which six people were killed when a train plowed into a sport-utility vehicle at a grade crossing in Westchester County, N.Y., cast renewed attention on the constantly lurking danger posed by the mixing of cars, trains and human nature at the tens of thousands of rail crossings across the country. Over the last week, reporters for The New York Times visited the 10 crossings that the railroad administration\u2019s accident-prediction algorithm deems the most likely sites for crashes in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut \u2014 to examine their configurations and talk to people about the safety concerns.", "paragraph_answer": "The Midland crossing has been the site of 29 accidents since 1975, according to the railroad agency\u2019s data. Two people have been killed and six more injured. The Metro-North Railroad crash last week, in which six people were killed when a train plowed into a sport-utility vehicle at a grade crossing in Westchester County, N.Y., cast renewed attention on the constantly lurking danger posed by the mixing of cars, trains and human nature at the tens of thousands of rail crossings across the country. Over the last week, reporters for The New York Times visited the 10 crossings that the railroad administration\u2019s accident-prediction algorithm deems the most likely sites for crashes in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut \u2014 to examine their configurations and talk to people about the safety concerns.", "sentence_answer": "Two people have been killed and six more injured."} +{"question": "Who wants t examine the configuration these dangerous crossing in NY, NJ, and Connecticut?", "paragraph": "The Midland crossing has been the site of 29 accidents since 1975, according to the railroad agency\u2019s data. Two people have been killed and six more injured. The Metro-North Railroad crash last week, in which six people were killed when a train plowed into a sport-utility vehicle at a grade crossing in Westchester County, N.Y., cast renewed attention on the constantly lurking danger posed by the mixing of cars, trains and human nature at the tens of thousands of rail crossings across the country. Over the last week, reporters for The New York Times visited the 10 crossings that the railroad administration\u2019s accident-prediction algorithm deems the most likely sites for crashes in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut \u2014 to examine their configurations and talk to people about the safety concerns.", "answer": "reporters for The New York Times", "sentence": "Over the last week, reporters for The New York Times visited the 10 crossings that the railroad administration\u2019s accident-prediction algorithm deems the most likely sites for crashes in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut \u2014 to examine their configurations and talk to people about the safety concerns.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Midland crossing has been the site of 29 accidents since 1975, according to the railroad agency\u2019s data. Two people have been killed and six more injured. The Metro-North Railroad crash last week, in which six people were killed when a train plowed into a sport-utility vehicle at a grade crossing in Westchester County, N.Y., cast renewed attention on the constantly lurking danger posed by the mixing of cars, trains and human nature at the tens of thousands of rail crossings across the country. Over the last week, reporters for The New York Times visited the 10 crossings that the railroad administration\u2019s accident-prediction algorithm deems the most likely sites for crashes in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut \u2014 to examine their configurations and talk to people about the safety concerns. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Midland crossing has been the site of 29 accidents since 1975, according to the railroad agency\u2019s data. Two people have been killed and six more injured. The Metro-North Railroad crash last week, in which six people were killed when a train plowed into a sport-utility vehicle at a grade crossing in Westchester County, N.Y., cast renewed attention on the constantly lurking danger posed by the mixing of cars, trains and human nature at the tens of thousands of rail crossings across the country. Over the last week, reporters for The New York Times visited the 10 crossings that the railroad administration\u2019s accident-prediction algorithm deems the most likely sites for crashes in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut \u2014 to examine their configurations and talk to people about the safety concerns.", "sentence_answer": "Over the last week, reporters for The New York Times visited the 10 crossings that the railroad administration\u2019s accident-prediction algorithm deems the most likely sites for crashes in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut \u2014 to examine their configurations and talk to people about the safety concerns."} +{"question": "How many dangerous crossings are in New Jersey?", "paragraph": "The metric is not a perfect measurement of danger. (The agency cautions that it does not take into account other factors, like local topography and traffic congestion.) But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country. Out of almost 130,000 public crossings in the nation, only 112 others have accident-prediction values as high as these 10. The Midland Avenue crossing currently has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash in the country.", "answer": "four", "sentence": "But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country.", "paragraph_sentence": "The metric is not a perfect measurement of danger. (The agency cautions that it does not take into account other factors, like local topography and traffic congestion.) But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country. Out of almost 130,000 public crossings in the nation, only 112 others have accident-prediction values as high as these 10. The Midland Avenue crossing currently has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash in the country.", "paragraph_answer": "The metric is not a perfect measurement of danger. (The agency cautions that it does not take into account other factors, like local topography and traffic congestion.) But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country. Out of almost 130,000 public crossings in the nation, only 112 others have accident-prediction values as high as these 10. The Midland Avenue crossing currently has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash in the country.", "sentence_answer": "But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country."} +{"question": "How many dangerous crossings are in Long Island?", "paragraph": "The metric is not a perfect measurement of danger. (The agency cautions that it does not take into account other factors, like local topography and traffic congestion.) But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country. Out of almost 130,000 public crossings in the nation, only 112 others have accident-prediction values as high as these 10. The Midland Avenue crossing currently has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash in the country.", "answer": "six", "sentence": "But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country.", "paragraph_sentence": "The metric is not a perfect measurement of danger. (The agency cautions that it does not take into account other factors, like local topography and traffic congestion.) But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country. Out of almost 130,000 public crossings in the nation, only 112 others have accident-prediction values as high as these 10. The Midland Avenue crossing currently has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash in the country.", "paragraph_answer": "The metric is not a perfect measurement of danger. (The agency cautions that it does not take into account other factors, like local topography and traffic congestion.) But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country. Out of almost 130,000 public crossings in the nation, only 112 others have accident-prediction values as high as these 10. The Midland Avenue crossing currently has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash in the country.", "sentence_answer": "But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country."} +{"question": "How does the Times consider these crossings?", "paragraph": "The metric is not a perfect measurement of danger. (The agency cautions that it does not take into account other factors, like local topography and traffic congestion.) But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country. Out of almost 130,000 public crossings in the nation, only 112 others have accident-prediction values as high as these 10. The Midland Avenue crossing currently has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash in the country.", "answer": "the most hazardous", "sentence": "But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country.", "paragraph_sentence": "The metric is not a perfect measurement of danger. (The agency cautions that it does not take into account other factors, like local topography and traffic congestion.) But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country. Out of almost 130,000 public crossings in the nation, only 112 others have accident-prediction values as high as these 10. The Midland Avenue crossing currently has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash in the country.", "paragraph_answer": "The metric is not a perfect measurement of danger. (The agency cautions that it does not take into account other factors, like local topography and traffic congestion.) But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country. Out of almost 130,000 public crossings in the nation, only 112 others have accident-prediction values as high as these 10. The Midland Avenue crossing currently has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash in the country.", "sentence_answer": "But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country."} +{"question": "Who has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash?", "paragraph": "The metric is not a perfect measurement of danger. (The agency cautions that it does not take into account other factors, like local topography and traffic congestion.) But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country. Out of almost 130,000 public crossings in the nation, only 112 others have accident-prediction values as high as these 10. The Midland Avenue crossing currently has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash in the country.", "answer": "The Midland Avenue", "sentence": "The Midland Avenue crossing currently has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash in the country.", "paragraph_sentence": "The metric is not a perfect measurement of danger. (The agency cautions that it does not take into account other factors, like local topography and traffic congestion.) But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country. Out of almost 130,000 public crossings in the nation, only 112 others have accident-prediction values as high as these 10. The Midland Avenue crossing currently has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash in the country. ", "paragraph_answer": "The metric is not a perfect measurement of danger. (The agency cautions that it does not take into account other factors, like local topography and traffic congestion.) But the 10 crossings, four in New Jersey and six on Long Island, examined by The Times are easily among the most hazardous in the country. Out of almost 130,000 public crossings in the nation, only 112 others have accident-prediction values as high as these 10. The Midland Avenue crossing currently has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash in the country.", "sentence_answer": " The Midland Avenue crossing currently has the eighth highest likelihood of a crash in the country."} +{"question": "where is the location with the highest accident prediction avenue?", "paragraph": "The location with the highest accident prediction value in the country is in Ashdown, Ark. \u2014 a freight railroad crossing that has been the site of 19 accidents since 1975. There are no warning lights or gates at the crossing. The site of the Metro-North crash, a less traveled crossing in Valhalla, N.Y., where the last accident was a fatal collision in 1984, is rated nowhere near as dangerous but is still in the top fifth of the most potentially hazardous crossings in the New York City region. Several factors make the mix of trains and humans in the region more dangerous than elsewhere. Commuter trains travel through densely populated areas at speeds as high as 80 miles per hour. The freight trains that dominate the tracks in other parts of the country travel much slower through towns, often just 10 m.p.h. The commuter rail lines in the region bear more trains each day than many freight train crossings elsewhere see in a month. But some of the crossings The Times examined have problems that safety experts say can increase the chances of a collision, like roads and tracks meeting at harsh angles and traffic signals in proximity that, in heavy traffic, can contribute to drivers\u2019 getting stuck on the tracks. Correcting Problems", "answer": "Ashdown, Ark.", "sentence": "The location with the highest accident prediction value in the country is in Ashdown, Ark. \u2014 a freight railroad crossing that has been the site of 19 accidents since 1975.", "paragraph_sentence": " The location with the highest accident prediction value in the country is in Ashdown, Ark. \u2014 a freight railroad crossing that has been the site of 19 accidents since 1975. There are no warning lights or gates at the crossing. The site of the Metro-North crash, a less traveled crossing in Valhalla, N.Y., where the last accident was a fatal collision in 1984, is rated nowhere near as dangerous but is still in the top fifth of the most potentially hazardous crossings in the New York City region. Several factors make the mix of trains and humans in the region more dangerous than elsewhere. Commuter trains travel through densely populated areas at speeds as high as 80 miles per hour. The freight trains that dominate the tracks in other parts of the country travel much slower through towns, often just 10 m.p.h. The commuter rail lines in the region bear more trains each day than many freight train crossings elsewhere see in a month. But some of the crossings The Times examined have problems that safety experts say can increase the chances of a collision, like roads and tracks meeting at harsh angles and traffic signals in proximity that, in heavy traffic, can contribute to drivers\u2019 getting stuck on the tracks. Correcting Problems", "paragraph_answer": "The location with the highest accident prediction value in the country is in Ashdown, Ark. \u2014 a freight railroad crossing that has been the site of 19 accidents since 1975. There are no warning lights or gates at the crossing. The site of the Metro-North crash, a less traveled crossing in Valhalla, N.Y., where the last accident was a fatal collision in 1984, is rated nowhere near as dangerous but is still in the top fifth of the most potentially hazardous crossings in the New York City region. Several factors make the mix of trains and humans in the region more dangerous than elsewhere. Commuter trains travel through densely populated areas at speeds as high as 80 miles per hour. The freight trains that dominate the tracks in other parts of the country travel much slower through towns, often just 10 m.p.h. The commuter rail lines in the region bear more trains each day than many freight train crossings elsewhere see in a month. But some of the crossings The Times examined have problems that safety experts say can increase the chances of a collision, like roads and tracks meeting at harsh angles and traffic signals in proximity that, in heavy traffic, can contribute to drivers\u2019 getting stuck on the tracks. Correcting Problems", "sentence_answer": "The location with the highest accident prediction value in the country is in Ashdown, Ark. \u2014 a freight railroad crossing that has been the site of 19 accidents since 1975."} +{"question": "Were happened the fatal accident in 1984?", "paragraph": "The location with the highest accident prediction value in the country is in Ashdown, Ark. \u2014 a freight railroad crossing that has been the site of 19 accidents since 1975. There are no warning lights or gates at the crossing. The site of the Metro-North crash, a less traveled crossing in Valhalla, N.Y., where the last accident was a fatal collision in 1984, is rated nowhere near as dangerous but is still in the top fifth of the most potentially hazardous crossings in the New York City region. Several factors make the mix of trains and humans in the region more dangerous than elsewhere. Commuter trains travel through densely populated areas at speeds as high as 80 miles per hour. The freight trains that dominate the tracks in other parts of the country travel much slower through towns, often just 10 m.p.h. The commuter rail lines in the region bear more trains each day than many freight train crossings elsewhere see in a month. But some of the crossings The Times examined have problems that safety experts say can increase the chances of a collision, like roads and tracks meeting at harsh angles and traffic signals in proximity that, in heavy traffic, can contribute to drivers\u2019 getting stuck on the tracks. Correcting Problems", "answer": "Valhalla, N.Y", "sentence": "The site of the Metro-North crash, a less traveled crossing in Valhalla, N.Y ., where the last accident was a fatal collision in 1984, is rated nowhere near as dangerous but is still in the top fifth of the most potentially hazardous crossings in the New York City region.", "paragraph_sentence": "The location with the highest accident prediction value in the country is in Ashdown, Ark. \u2014 a freight railroad crossing that has been the site of 19 accidents since 1975. There are no warning lights or gates at the crossing. The site of the Metro-North crash, a less traveled crossing in Valhalla, N.Y ., where the last accident was a fatal collision in 1984, is rated nowhere near as dangerous but is still in the top fifth of the most potentially hazardous crossings in the New York City region. Several factors make the mix of trains and humans in the region more dangerous than elsewhere. Commuter trains travel through densely populated areas at speeds as high as 80 miles per hour. The freight trains that dominate the tracks in other parts of the country travel much slower through towns, often just 10 m.p.h. The commuter rail lines in the region bear more trains each day than many freight train crossings elsewhere see in a month. But some of the crossings The Times examined have problems that safety experts say can increase the chances of a collision, like roads and tracks meeting at harsh angles and traffic signals in proximity that, in heavy traffic, can contribute to drivers\u2019 getting stuck on the tracks. Correcting Problems", "paragraph_answer": "The location with the highest accident prediction value in the country is in Ashdown, Ark. \u2014 a freight railroad crossing that has been the site of 19 accidents since 1975. There are no warning lights or gates at the crossing. The site of the Metro-North crash, a less traveled crossing in Valhalla, N.Y ., where the last accident was a fatal collision in 1984, is rated nowhere near as dangerous but is still in the top fifth of the most potentially hazardous crossings in the New York City region. Several factors make the mix of trains and humans in the region more dangerous than elsewhere. Commuter trains travel through densely populated areas at speeds as high as 80 miles per hour. The freight trains that dominate the tracks in other parts of the country travel much slower through towns, often just 10 m.p.h. The commuter rail lines in the region bear more trains each day than many freight train crossings elsewhere see in a month. But some of the crossings The Times examined have problems that safety experts say can increase the chances of a collision, like roads and tracks meeting at harsh angles and traffic signals in proximity that, in heavy traffic, can contribute to drivers\u2019 getting stuck on the tracks. Correcting Problems", "sentence_answer": "The site of the Metro-North crash, a less traveled crossing in Valhalla, N.Y ., where the last accident was a fatal collision in 1984, is rated nowhere near as dangerous but is still in the top fifth of the most potentially hazardous crossings in the New York City region."} +{"question": "How many accidents have happened in Ashdown since 1975?", "paragraph": "The location with the highest accident prediction value in the country is in Ashdown, Ark. \u2014 a freight railroad crossing that has been the site of 19 accidents since 1975. There are no warning lights or gates at the crossing. The site of the Metro-North crash, a less traveled crossing in Valhalla, N.Y., where the last accident was a fatal collision in 1984, is rated nowhere near as dangerous but is still in the top fifth of the most potentially hazardous crossings in the New York City region. Several factors make the mix of trains and humans in the region more dangerous than elsewhere. Commuter trains travel through densely populated areas at speeds as high as 80 miles per hour. The freight trains that dominate the tracks in other parts of the country travel much slower through towns, often just 10 m.p.h. The commuter rail lines in the region bear more trains each day than many freight train crossings elsewhere see in a month. But some of the crossings The Times examined have problems that safety experts say can increase the chances of a collision, like roads and tracks meeting at harsh angles and traffic signals in proximity that, in heavy traffic, can contribute to drivers\u2019 getting stuck on the tracks. Correcting Problems", "answer": "19", "sentence": "The location with the highest accident prediction value in the country is in Ashdown, Ark. \u2014 a freight railroad crossing that has been the site of 19 accidents since 1975.", "paragraph_sentence": " The location with the highest accident prediction value in the country is in Ashdown, Ark. \u2014 a freight railroad crossing that has been the site of 19 accidents since 1975. There are no warning lights or gates at the crossing. The site of the Metro-North crash, a less traveled crossing in Valhalla, N.Y., where the last accident was a fatal collision in 1984, is rated nowhere near as dangerous but is still in the top fifth of the most potentially hazardous crossings in the New York City region. Several factors make the mix of trains and humans in the region more dangerous than elsewhere. Commuter trains travel through densely populated areas at speeds as high as 80 miles per hour. The freight trains that dominate the tracks in other parts of the country travel much slower through towns, often just 10 m.p.h. The commuter rail lines in the region bear more trains each day than many freight train crossings elsewhere see in a month. But some of the crossings The Times examined have problems that safety experts say can increase the chances of a collision, like roads and tracks meeting at harsh angles and traffic signals in proximity that, in heavy traffic, can contribute to drivers\u2019 getting stuck on the tracks. Correcting Problems", "paragraph_answer": "The location with the highest accident prediction value in the country is in Ashdown, Ark. \u2014 a freight railroad crossing that has been the site of 19 accidents since 1975. There are no warning lights or gates at the crossing. The site of the Metro-North crash, a less traveled crossing in Valhalla, N.Y., where the last accident was a fatal collision in 1984, is rated nowhere near as dangerous but is still in the top fifth of the most potentially hazardous crossings in the New York City region. Several factors make the mix of trains and humans in the region more dangerous than elsewhere. Commuter trains travel through densely populated areas at speeds as high as 80 miles per hour. The freight trains that dominate the tracks in other parts of the country travel much slower through towns, often just 10 m.p.h. The commuter rail lines in the region bear more trains each day than many freight train crossings elsewhere see in a month. But some of the crossings The Times examined have problems that safety experts say can increase the chances of a collision, like roads and tracks meeting at harsh angles and traffic signals in proximity that, in heavy traffic, can contribute to drivers\u2019 getting stuck on the tracks. Correcting Problems", "sentence_answer": "The location with the highest accident prediction value in the country is in Ashdown, Ark. \u2014 a freight railroad crossing that has been the site of 19 accidents since 1975."} +{"question": "What's the speed of trains that traveled trough those areas?", "paragraph": "The location with the highest accident prediction value in the country is in Ashdown, Ark. \u2014 a freight railroad crossing that has been the site of 19 accidents since 1975. There are no warning lights or gates at the crossing. The site of the Metro-North crash, a less traveled crossing in Valhalla, N.Y., where the last accident was a fatal collision in 1984, is rated nowhere near as dangerous but is still in the top fifth of the most potentially hazardous crossings in the New York City region. Several factors make the mix of trains and humans in the region more dangerous than elsewhere. Commuter trains travel through densely populated areas at speeds as high as 80 miles per hour. The freight trains that dominate the tracks in other parts of the country travel much slower through towns, often just 10 m.p.h. The commuter rail lines in the region bear more trains each day than many freight train crossings elsewhere see in a month. But some of the crossings The Times examined have problems that safety experts say can increase the chances of a collision, like roads and tracks meeting at harsh angles and traffic signals in proximity that, in heavy traffic, can contribute to drivers\u2019 getting stuck on the tracks. Correcting Problems", "answer": "80 miles per hour", "sentence": "Commuter trains travel through densely populated areas at speeds as high as 80 miles per hour .", "paragraph_sentence": "The location with the highest accident prediction value in the country is in Ashdown, Ark. \u2014 a freight railroad crossing that has been the site of 19 accidents since 1975. There are no warning lights or gates at the crossing. The site of the Metro-North crash, a less traveled crossing in Valhalla, N.Y., where the last accident was a fatal collision in 1984, is rated nowhere near as dangerous but is still in the top fifth of the most potentially hazardous crossings in the New York City region. Several factors make the mix of trains and humans in the region more dangerous than elsewhere. Commuter trains travel through densely populated areas at speeds as high as 80 miles per hour . The freight trains that dominate the tracks in other parts of the country travel much slower through towns, often just 10 m.p.h. The commuter rail lines in the region bear more trains each day than many freight train crossings elsewhere see in a month. But some of the crossings The Times examined have problems that safety experts say can increase the chances of a collision, like roads and tracks meeting at harsh angles and traffic signals in proximity that, in heavy traffic, can contribute to drivers\u2019 getting stuck on the tracks. Correcting Problems", "paragraph_answer": "The location with the highest accident prediction value in the country is in Ashdown, Ark. \u2014 a freight railroad crossing that has been the site of 19 accidents since 1975. There are no warning lights or gates at the crossing. The site of the Metro-North crash, a less traveled crossing in Valhalla, N.Y., where the last accident was a fatal collision in 1984, is rated nowhere near as dangerous but is still in the top fifth of the most potentially hazardous crossings in the New York City region. Several factors make the mix of trains and humans in the region more dangerous than elsewhere. Commuter trains travel through densely populated areas at speeds as high as 80 miles per hour . The freight trains that dominate the tracks in other parts of the country travel much slower through towns, often just 10 m.p.h. The commuter rail lines in the region bear more trains each day than many freight train crossings elsewhere see in a month. But some of the crossings The Times examined have problems that safety experts say can increase the chances of a collision, like roads and tracks meeting at harsh angles and traffic signals in proximity that, in heavy traffic, can contribute to drivers\u2019 getting stuck on the tracks. Correcting Problems", "sentence_answer": "Commuter trains travel through densely populated areas at speeds as high as 80 miles per hour ."} +{"question": "Who suggested some recommendations t reduce accidents?", "paragraph": "The location with the highest accident prediction value in the country is in Ashdown, Ark. \u2014 a freight railroad crossing that has been the site of 19 accidents since 1975. There are no warning lights or gates at the crossing. The site of the Metro-North crash, a less traveled crossing in Valhalla, N.Y., where the last accident was a fatal collision in 1984, is rated nowhere near as dangerous but is still in the top fifth of the most potentially hazardous crossings in the New York City region. Several factors make the mix of trains and humans in the region more dangerous than elsewhere. Commuter trains travel through densely populated areas at speeds as high as 80 miles per hour. The freight trains that dominate the tracks in other parts of the country travel much slower through towns, often just 10 m.p.h. The commuter rail lines in the region bear more trains each day than many freight train crossings elsewhere see in a month. But some of the crossings The Times examined have problems that safety experts say can increase the chances of a collision, like roads and tracks meeting at harsh angles and traffic signals in proximity that, in heavy traffic, can contribute to drivers\u2019 getting stuck on the tracks. Correcting Problems", "answer": "safety experts", "sentence": "But some of the crossings The Times examined have problems that safety experts say can increase the chances of a collision, like roads and tracks meeting at harsh angles and traffic signals in proximity that, in heavy traffic, can contribute to drivers\u2019 getting stuck on the tracks.", "paragraph_sentence": "The location with the highest accident prediction value in the country is in Ashdown, Ark. \u2014 a freight railroad crossing that has been the site of 19 accidents since 1975. There are no warning lights or gates at the crossing. The site of the Metro-North crash, a less traveled crossing in Valhalla, N.Y., where the last accident was a fatal collision in 1984, is rated nowhere near as dangerous but is still in the top fifth of the most potentially hazardous crossings in the New York City region. Several factors make the mix of trains and humans in the region more dangerous than elsewhere. Commuter trains travel through densely populated areas at speeds as high as 80 miles per hour. The freight trains that dominate the tracks in other parts of the country travel much slower through towns, often just 10 m.p.h. The commuter rail lines in the region bear more trains each day than many freight train crossings elsewhere see in a month. But some of the crossings The Times examined have problems that safety experts say can increase the chances of a collision, like roads and tracks meeting at harsh angles and traffic signals in proximity that, in heavy traffic, can contribute to drivers\u2019 getting stuck on the tracks. Correcting Problems", "paragraph_answer": "The location with the highest accident prediction value in the country is in Ashdown, Ark. \u2014 a freight railroad crossing that has been the site of 19 accidents since 1975. There are no warning lights or gates at the crossing. The site of the Metro-North crash, a less traveled crossing in Valhalla, N.Y., where the last accident was a fatal collision in 1984, is rated nowhere near as dangerous but is still in the top fifth of the most potentially hazardous crossings in the New York City region. Several factors make the mix of trains and humans in the region more dangerous than elsewhere. Commuter trains travel through densely populated areas at speeds as high as 80 miles per hour. The freight trains that dominate the tracks in other parts of the country travel much slower through towns, often just 10 m.p.h. The commuter rail lines in the region bear more trains each day than many freight train crossings elsewhere see in a month. But some of the crossings The Times examined have problems that safety experts say can increase the chances of a collision, like roads and tracks meeting at harsh angles and traffic signals in proximity that, in heavy traffic, can contribute to drivers\u2019 getting stuck on the tracks. Correcting Problems", "sentence_answer": "But some of the crossings The Times examined have problems that safety experts say can increase the chances of a collision, like roads and tracks meeting at harsh angles and traffic signals in proximity that, in heavy traffic, can contribute to drivers\u2019 getting stuck on the tracks."} +{"question": "Which is one of the less expensive safety measures?", "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": "automatic gates", "sentence": "The less expensive safety measures \u2014 automatic gates , lights, bells and signs \u2014 are largely in place in the New York region.", "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": "The less expensive safety measures \u2014 automatic gates , lights, bells and signs \u2014 are largely in place in the New York region."} +{"question": "What did the couple do when the train passed through?", "paragraph": "The less expensive safety measures \u2014 automatic gates, lights, bells and signs \u2014 are largely in place in the New York region. A challenge is creating crossings that can overcome the lesser impulses of human nature in a part of the country where many people do not see patience as a virtue. In Brentwood, N.Y., on Monday, a couple on foot watched as the safety gate at the Washington Avenue crossing, one of the most dangerous in the region, lowered in front of them, its bells sounding and lights flashing. After one Long Island Rail Road train passed through, heading east, the man and woman ducked underneath the crossing gate. The man glanced toward the train receding in the distance and suddenly jumped back. \u201cThere\u2019s another train coming!\u201d he yelled.", "answer": "ducked underneath the crossing gate", "sentence": "After one Long Island Rail Road train passed through, heading east, the man and woman ducked underneath the crossing gate .", "paragraph_sentence": "The less expensive safety measures \u2014 automatic gates, lights, bells and signs \u2014 are largely in place in the New York region. A challenge is creating crossings that can overcome the lesser impulses of human nature in a part of the country where many people do not see patience as a virtue. In Brentwood, N.Y., on Monday, a couple on foot watched as the safety gate at the Washington Avenue crossing, one of the most dangerous in the region, lowered in front of them, its bells sounding and lights flashing. After one Long Island Rail Road train passed through, heading east, the man and woman ducked underneath the crossing gate . The man glanced toward the train receding in the distance and suddenly jumped back. \u201cThere\u2019s another train coming!\u201d he yelled.", "paragraph_answer": "The less expensive safety measures \u2014 automatic gates, lights, bells and signs \u2014 are largely in place in the New York region. A challenge is creating crossings that can overcome the lesser impulses of human nature in a part of the country where many people do not see patience as a virtue. In Brentwood, N.Y., on Monday, a couple on foot watched as the safety gate at the Washington Avenue crossing, one of the most dangerous in the region, lowered in front of them, its bells sounding and lights flashing. After one Long Island Rail Road train passed through, heading east, the man and woman ducked underneath the crossing gate . The man glanced toward the train receding in the distance and suddenly jumped back. \u201cThere\u2019s another train coming!\u201d he yelled.", "sentence_answer": "After one Long Island Rail Road train passed through, heading east, the man and woman ducked underneath the crossing gate ."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What else did the man see when he was on the other side?", "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": "another train coming", "sentence": "\u201cThere\u2019s another train coming !\u201d", "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": "\u201cThere\u2019s another train coming !\u201d"} +{"question": "Over the last few years has inflation been high or low?", "paragraph": "The Federal Reserve is supposed to achieve two goals simultaneously: full employment with stable prices. Yet there is one obvious factor that drives American living standards but risks being lost in this mix: wages. The economic status of most working-age households is determined by whether people are employed and for how many hours. It is also affected by how quickly prices are rising and whether their paychecks are at least keeping up with, if not outpacing, those prices. Over the last few years, employment has been growing and inflation has been low. But annual wage growth has been stuck at about 2 percent going on six years now. This combination has caused some economists and Fed watchers to argue that the Fed should target wages as a third metric. Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman, happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction. Ms. Yellen gave her answer in a recent speech in San Francisco: No.", "answer": "low", "sentence": "Over the last few years, employment has been growing and inflation has been low .", "paragraph_sentence": "The Federal Reserve is supposed to achieve two goals simultaneously: full employment with stable prices. Yet there is one obvious factor that drives American living standards but risks being lost in this mix: wages. The economic status of most working-age households is determined by whether people are employed and for how many hours. It is also affected by how quickly prices are rising and whether their paychecks are at least keeping up with, if not outpacing, those prices. Over the last few years, employment has been growing and inflation has been low . But annual wage growth has been stuck at about 2 percent going on six years now. This combination has caused some economists and Fed watchers to argue that the Fed should target wages as a third metric. Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman, happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction. Ms. Yellen gave her answer in a recent speech in San Francisco: No.", "paragraph_answer": "The Federal Reserve is supposed to achieve two goals simultaneously: full employment with stable prices. Yet there is one obvious factor that drives American living standards but risks being lost in this mix: wages. The economic status of most working-age households is determined by whether people are employed and for how many hours. It is also affected by how quickly prices are rising and whether their paychecks are at least keeping up with, if not outpacing, those prices. Over the last few years, employment has been growing and inflation has been low . But annual wage growth has been stuck at about 2 percent going on six years now. This combination has caused some economists and Fed watchers to argue that the Fed should target wages as a third metric. Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman, happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction. Ms. Yellen gave her answer in a recent speech in San Francisco: No.", "sentence_answer": "Over the last few years, employment has been growing and inflation has been low ."} +{"question": "What should be targeted by the Fed as a third metric?", "paragraph": "The Federal Reserve is supposed to achieve two goals simultaneously: full employment with stable prices. Yet there is one obvious factor that drives American living standards but risks being lost in this mix: wages. The economic status of most working-age households is determined by whether people are employed and for how many hours. It is also affected by how quickly prices are rising and whether their paychecks are at least keeping up with, if not outpacing, those prices. Over the last few years, employment has been growing and inflation has been low. But annual wage growth has been stuck at about 2 percent going on six years now. This combination has caused some economists and Fed watchers to argue that the Fed should target wages as a third metric. Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman, happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction. Ms. Yellen gave her answer in a recent speech in San Francisco: No.", "answer": "wages", "sentence": "Yet there is one obvious factor that drives American living standards but risks being lost in this mix: wages .", "paragraph_sentence": "The Federal Reserve is supposed to achieve two goals simultaneously: full employment with stable prices. Yet there is one obvious factor that drives American living standards but risks being lost in this mix: wages . The economic status of most working-age households is determined by whether people are employed and for how many hours. It is also affected by how quickly prices are rising and whether their paychecks are at least keeping up with, if not outpacing, those prices. Over the last few years, employment has been growing and inflation has been low. But annual wage growth has been stuck at about 2 percent going on six years now. This combination has caused some economists and Fed watchers to argue that the Fed should target wages as a third metric. Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman, happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction. Ms. Yellen gave her answer in a recent speech in San Francisco: No.", "paragraph_answer": "The Federal Reserve is supposed to achieve two goals simultaneously: full employment with stable prices. Yet there is one obvious factor that drives American living standards but risks being lost in this mix: wages . The economic status of most working-age households is determined by whether people are employed and for how many hours. It is also affected by how quickly prices are rising and whether their paychecks are at least keeping up with, if not outpacing, those prices. Over the last few years, employment has been growing and inflation has been low. But annual wage growth has been stuck at about 2 percent going on six years now. This combination has caused some economists and Fed watchers to argue that the Fed should target wages as a third metric. Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman, happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction. Ms. Yellen gave her answer in a recent speech in San Francisco: No.", "sentence_answer": "Yet there is one obvious factor that drives American living standards but risks being lost in this mix: wages ."} +{"question": "What percentage has the annual wage growth been stuck at for the last six years?", "paragraph": "The Federal Reserve is supposed to achieve two goals simultaneously: full employment with stable prices. Yet there is one obvious factor that drives American living standards but risks being lost in this mix: wages. The economic status of most working-age households is determined by whether people are employed and for how many hours. It is also affected by how quickly prices are rising and whether their paychecks are at least keeping up with, if not outpacing, those prices. Over the last few years, employment has been growing and inflation has been low. But annual wage growth has been stuck at about 2 percent going on six years now. This combination has caused some economists and Fed watchers to argue that the Fed should target wages as a third metric. Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman, happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction. Ms. Yellen gave her answer in a recent speech in San Francisco: No.", "answer": "2", "sentence": "But annual wage growth has been stuck at about 2 percent going on six years now.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Federal Reserve is supposed to achieve two goals simultaneously: full employment with stable prices. Yet there is one obvious factor that drives American living standards but risks being lost in this mix: wages. The economic status of most working-age households is determined by whether people are employed and for how many hours. It is also affected by how quickly prices are rising and whether their paychecks are at least keeping up with, if not outpacing, those prices. Over the last few years, employment has been growing and inflation has been low. But annual wage growth has been stuck at about 2 percent going on six years now. This combination has caused some economists and Fed watchers to argue that the Fed should target wages as a third metric. Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman, happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction. Ms. Yellen gave her answer in a recent speech in San Francisco: No.", "paragraph_answer": "The Federal Reserve is supposed to achieve two goals simultaneously: full employment with stable prices. Yet there is one obvious factor that drives American living standards but risks being lost in this mix: wages. The economic status of most working-age households is determined by whether people are employed and for how many hours. It is also affected by how quickly prices are rising and whether their paychecks are at least keeping up with, if not outpacing, those prices. Over the last few years, employment has been growing and inflation has been low. But annual wage growth has been stuck at about 2 percent going on six years now. This combination has caused some economists and Fed watchers to argue that the Fed should target wages as a third metric. Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman, happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction. Ms. Yellen gave her answer in a recent speech in San Francisco: No.", "sentence_answer": "But annual wage growth has been stuck at about 2 percent going on six years now."} +{"question": "What is the title Janet Yellen holds at the Fed?", "paragraph": "The Federal Reserve is supposed to achieve two goals simultaneously: full employment with stable prices. Yet there is one obvious factor that drives American living standards but risks being lost in this mix: wages. The economic status of most working-age households is determined by whether people are employed and for how many hours. It is also affected by how quickly prices are rising and whether their paychecks are at least keeping up with, if not outpacing, those prices. Over the last few years, employment has been growing and inflation has been low. But annual wage growth has been stuck at about 2 percent going on six years now. This combination has caused some economists and Fed watchers to argue that the Fed should target wages as a third metric. Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman, happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction. Ms. Yellen gave her answer in a recent speech in San Francisco: No.", "answer": "chairwoman", "sentence": "Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman , happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Federal Reserve is supposed to achieve two goals simultaneously: full employment with stable prices. Yet there is one obvious factor that drives American living standards but risks being lost in this mix: wages. The economic status of most working-age households is determined by whether people are employed and for how many hours. It is also affected by how quickly prices are rising and whether their paychecks are at least keeping up with, if not outpacing, those prices. Over the last few years, employment has been growing and inflation has been low. But annual wage growth has been stuck at about 2 percent going on six years now. This combination has caused some economists and Fed watchers to argue that the Fed should target wages as a third metric. Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman , happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction. Ms. Yellen gave her answer in a recent speech in San Francisco: No.", "paragraph_answer": "The Federal Reserve is supposed to achieve two goals simultaneously: full employment with stable prices. Yet there is one obvious factor that drives American living standards but risks being lost in this mix: wages. The economic status of most working-age households is determined by whether people are employed and for how many hours. It is also affected by how quickly prices are rising and whether their paychecks are at least keeping up with, if not outpacing, those prices. Over the last few years, employment has been growing and inflation has been low. But annual wage growth has been stuck at about 2 percent going on six years now. This combination has caused some economists and Fed watchers to argue that the Fed should target wages as a third metric. Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman , happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction. Ms. Yellen gave her answer in a recent speech in San Francisco: No.", "sentence_answer": "Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman , happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction."} +{"question": "Ms. Yellen recently gave a speech in what city?", "paragraph": "The Federal Reserve is supposed to achieve two goals simultaneously: full employment with stable prices. Yet there is one obvious factor that drives American living standards but risks being lost in this mix: wages. The economic status of most working-age households is determined by whether people are employed and for how many hours. It is also affected by how quickly prices are rising and whether their paychecks are at least keeping up with, if not outpacing, those prices. Over the last few years, employment has been growing and inflation has been low. But annual wage growth has been stuck at about 2 percent going on six years now. This combination has caused some economists and Fed watchers to argue that the Fed should target wages as a third metric. Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman, happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction. Ms. Yellen gave her answer in a recent speech in San Francisco: No.", "answer": "San Francisco", "sentence": "Ms. Yellen gave her answer in a recent speech in San Francisco : No.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Federal Reserve is supposed to achieve two goals simultaneously: full employment with stable prices. Yet there is one obvious factor that drives American living standards but risks being lost in this mix: wages. The economic status of most working-age households is determined by whether people are employed and for how many hours. It is also affected by how quickly prices are rising and whether their paychecks are at least keeping up with, if not outpacing, those prices. Over the last few years, employment has been growing and inflation has been low. But annual wage growth has been stuck at about 2 percent going on six years now. This combination has caused some economists and Fed watchers to argue that the Fed should target wages as a third metric. Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman, happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction. Ms. Yellen gave her answer in a recent speech in San Francisco : No. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Federal Reserve is supposed to achieve two goals simultaneously: full employment with stable prices. Yet there is one obvious factor that drives American living standards but risks being lost in this mix: wages. The economic status of most working-age households is determined by whether people are employed and for how many hours. It is also affected by how quickly prices are rising and whether their paychecks are at least keeping up with, if not outpacing, those prices. Over the last few years, employment has been growing and inflation has been low. But annual wage growth has been stuck at about 2 percent going on six years now. This combination has caused some economists and Fed watchers to argue that the Fed should target wages as a third metric. Janet Yellen, the Fed chairwoman, happens to agree with many of these wage-conscious analysts on a wide range of other economic issues, raising the possibility the Fed might indeed move in this direction. Ms. Yellen gave her answer in a recent speech in San Francisco : No.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Yellen gave her answer in a recent speech in San Francisco : No."} +{"question": "Who's stance offers a reason to explain the benefits of monitoring wages?", "paragraph": "I count myself among those analysts who have described the potential benefits of wage targeting at the Fed \u2014 waiting until wages are growing considerably faster than they are today before tapping the brakes. Ms. Yellen\u2019s stance offers a reason to explain those benefits. So here goes: The current unemployment rate is an unreliable indicator of the job market\u2019s strength. The unemployment rate has long informed Fed policy by signaling the extent of slack in the labor market, but in recent years, it has been biased down in this regard. For example, the job market is not as tight as its current level of 5.5 percent unemployment suggests.", "answer": "Ms. Yellen", "sentence": "Ms. Yellen \u2019s stance offers a reason to explain those benefits.", "paragraph_sentence": "I count myself among those analysts who have described the potential benefits of wage targeting at the Fed \u2014 waiting until wages are growing considerably faster than they are today before tapping the brakes. Ms. Yellen \u2019s stance offers a reason to explain those benefits. So here goes: The current unemployment rate is an unreliable indicator of the job market\u2019s strength. The unemployment rate has long informed Fed policy by signaling the extent of slack in the labor market, but in recent years, it has been biased down in this regard. For example, the job market is not as tight as its current level of 5.5 percent unemployment suggests.", "paragraph_answer": "I count myself among those analysts who have described the potential benefits of wage targeting at the Fed \u2014 waiting until wages are growing considerably faster than they are today before tapping the brakes. Ms. Yellen \u2019s stance offers a reason to explain those benefits. So here goes: The current unemployment rate is an unreliable indicator of the job market\u2019s strength. The unemployment rate has long informed Fed policy by signaling the extent of slack in the labor market, but in recent years, it has been biased down in this regard. For example, the job market is not as tight as its current level of 5.5 percent unemployment suggests.", "sentence_answer": " Ms. Yellen \u2019s stance offers a reason to explain those benefits."} +{"question": "What is the current unemployment level?", "paragraph": "I count myself among those analysts who have described the potential benefits of wage targeting at the Fed \u2014 waiting until wages are growing considerably faster than they are today before tapping the brakes. Ms. Yellen\u2019s stance offers a reason to explain those benefits. So here goes: The current unemployment rate is an unreliable indicator of the job market\u2019s strength. The unemployment rate has long informed Fed policy by signaling the extent of slack in the labor market, but in recent years, it has been biased down in this regard. For example, the job market is not as tight as its current level of 5.5 percent unemployment suggests.", "answer": "5.5 percent", "sentence": "For example, the job market is not as tight as its current level of 5.5 percent unemployment suggests.", "paragraph_sentence": "I count myself among those analysts who have described the potential benefits of wage targeting at the Fed \u2014 waiting until wages are growing considerably faster than they are today before tapping the brakes. Ms. Yellen\u2019s stance offers a reason to explain those benefits. So here goes: The current unemployment rate is an unreliable indicator of the job market\u2019s strength. The unemployment rate has long informed Fed policy by signaling the extent of slack in the labor market, but in recent years, it has been biased down in this regard. For example, the job market is not as tight as its current level of 5.5 percent unemployment suggests. ", "paragraph_answer": "I count myself among those analysts who have described the potential benefits of wage targeting at the Fed \u2014 waiting until wages are growing considerably faster than they are today before tapping the brakes. Ms. Yellen\u2019s stance offers a reason to explain those benefits. So here goes: The current unemployment rate is an unreliable indicator of the job market\u2019s strength. The unemployment rate has long informed Fed policy by signaling the extent of slack in the labor market, but in recent years, it has been biased down in this regard. For example, the job market is not as tight as its current level of 5.5 percent unemployment suggests.", "sentence_answer": "For example, the job market is not as tight as its current level of 5.5 percent unemployment suggests."} +{"question": "What is an unreliable indicator of the job market's strength?", "paragraph": "I count myself among those analysts who have described the potential benefits of wage targeting at the Fed \u2014 waiting until wages are growing considerably faster than they are today before tapping the brakes. Ms. Yellen\u2019s stance offers a reason to explain those benefits. So here goes: The current unemployment rate is an unreliable indicator of the job market\u2019s strength. The unemployment rate has long informed Fed policy by signaling the extent of slack in the labor market, but in recent years, it has been biased down in this regard. For example, the job market is not as tight as its current level of 5.5 percent unemployment suggests.", "answer": "The current unemployment rate", "sentence": "So here goes: The current unemployment rate is an unreliable indicator of the job market\u2019s strength.", "paragraph_sentence": "I count myself among those analysts who have described the potential benefits of wage targeting at the Fed \u2014 waiting until wages are growing considerably faster than they are today before tapping the brakes. Ms. Yellen\u2019s stance offers a reason to explain those benefits. So here goes: The current unemployment rate is an unreliable indicator of the job market\u2019s strength. The unemployment rate has long informed Fed policy by signaling the extent of slack in the labor market, but in recent years, it has been biased down in this regard. For example, the job market is not as tight as its current level of 5.5 percent unemployment suggests.", "paragraph_answer": "I count myself among those analysts who have described the potential benefits of wage targeting at the Fed \u2014 waiting until wages are growing considerably faster than they are today before tapping the brakes. Ms. Yellen\u2019s stance offers a reason to explain those benefits. So here goes: The current unemployment rate is an unreliable indicator of the job market\u2019s strength. The unemployment rate has long informed Fed policy by signaling the extent of slack in the labor market, but in recent years, it has been biased down in this regard. For example, the job market is not as tight as its current level of 5.5 percent unemployment suggests.", "sentence_answer": "So here goes: The current unemployment rate is an unreliable indicator of the job market\u2019s strength."} +{"question": "The unemployment rate informs the Fed of slack in what?", "paragraph": "I count myself among those analysts who have described the potential benefits of wage targeting at the Fed \u2014 waiting until wages are growing considerably faster than they are today before tapping the brakes. Ms. Yellen\u2019s stance offers a reason to explain those benefits. So here goes: The current unemployment rate is an unreliable indicator of the job market\u2019s strength. The unemployment rate has long informed Fed policy by signaling the extent of slack in the labor market, but in recent years, it has been biased down in this regard. For example, the job market is not as tight as its current level of 5.5 percent unemployment suggests.", "answer": "labor market", "sentence": "The unemployment rate has long informed Fed policy by signaling the extent of slack in the labor market , but in recent years, it has been biased down in this regard.", "paragraph_sentence": "I count myself among those analysts who have described the potential benefits of wage targeting at the Fed \u2014 waiting until wages are growing considerably faster than they are today before tapping the brakes. Ms. Yellen\u2019s stance offers a reason to explain those benefits. So here goes: The current unemployment rate is an unreliable indicator of the job market\u2019s strength. The unemployment rate has long informed Fed policy by signaling the extent of slack in the labor market , but in recent years, it has been biased down in this regard. For example, the job market is not as tight as its current level of 5.5 percent unemployment suggests.", "paragraph_answer": "I count myself among those analysts who have described the potential benefits of wage targeting at the Fed \u2014 waiting until wages are growing considerably faster than they are today before tapping the brakes. Ms. Yellen\u2019s stance offers a reason to explain those benefits. So here goes: The current unemployment rate is an unreliable indicator of the job market\u2019s strength. The unemployment rate has long informed Fed policy by signaling the extent of slack in the labor market , but in recent years, it has been biased down in this regard. For example, the job market is not as tight as its current level of 5.5 percent unemployment suggests.", "sentence_answer": "The unemployment rate has long informed Fed policy by signaling the extent of slack in the labor market , but in recent years, it has been biased down in this regard."} +{"question": "Where was Mr. Reed warmly received?", "paragraph": "Indeed, Mr. Reed said he had been more warmly received in Europe where, in a series of recent shows, he explored the concept of the filmstrip in his paintings. \u201cIt\u2019s always been strange to feel that I\u2019m an American painter who\u2019s much more appreciated in Europe than I am here,\u201d he said. Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum\u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office. \u201cI hope the painting seems endless,\u201d Mr. Reed said. \u201cI\u2019m excited about what I\u2019m doing now,\u201d he added. \u201cI just hope I live long enough to be able to explore it. Painting is a long game \u2014 you need a lot of years. I feel like I\u2019m finally getting a feel for certain things and it\u2019s taken me this long to do it.\u201d", "answer": "Europe", "sentence": "Indeed, Mr. Reed said he had been more warmly received in Europe where, in a series of recent shows, he explored the concept of the filmstrip in his paintings.", "paragraph_sentence": " Indeed, Mr. Reed said he had been more warmly received in Europe where, in a series of recent shows, he explored the concept of the filmstrip in his paintings. \u201cIt\u2019s always been strange to feel that I\u2019m an American painter who\u2019s much more appreciated in Europe than I am here,\u201d he said. Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum\u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office. \u201cI hope the painting seems endless,\u201d Mr. Reed said. \u201cI\u2019m excited about what I\u2019m doing now,\u201d he added. \u201cI just hope I live long enough to be able to explore it. Painting is a long game \u2014 you need a lot of years. I feel like I\u2019m finally getting a feel for certain things and it\u2019s taken me this long to do it.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Indeed, Mr. Reed said he had been more warmly received in Europe where, in a series of recent shows, he explored the concept of the filmstrip in his paintings. \u201cIt\u2019s always been strange to feel that I\u2019m an American painter who\u2019s much more appreciated in Europe than I am here,\u201d he said. Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum\u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office. \u201cI hope the painting seems endless,\u201d Mr. Reed said. \u201cI\u2019m excited about what I\u2019m doing now,\u201d he added. \u201cI just hope I live long enough to be able to explore it. Painting is a long game \u2014 you need a lot of years. I feel like I\u2019m finally getting a feel for certain things and it\u2019s taken me this long to do it.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Indeed, Mr. Reed said he had been more warmly received in Europe where, in a series of recent shows, he explored the concept of the filmstrip in his paintings."} +{"question": "Who was warmly received in Europe?", "paragraph": "Indeed, Mr. Reed said he had been more warmly received in Europe where, in a series of recent shows, he explored the concept of the filmstrip in his paintings. \u201cIt\u2019s always been strange to feel that I\u2019m an American painter who\u2019s much more appreciated in Europe than I am here,\u201d he said. Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum\u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office. \u201cI hope the painting seems endless,\u201d Mr. Reed said. \u201cI\u2019m excited about what I\u2019m doing now,\u201d he added. \u201cI just hope I live long enough to be able to explore it. Painting is a long game \u2014 you need a lot of years. I feel like I\u2019m finally getting a feel for certain things and it\u2019s taken me this long to do it.\u201d", "answer": "West 57th Street gallery", "sentence": "Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum\u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office.", "paragraph_sentence": "Indeed, Mr. Reed said he had been more warmly received in Europe where, in a series of recent shows, he explored the concept of the filmstrip in his paintings. \u201cIt\u2019s always been strange to feel that I\u2019m an American painter who\u2019s much more appreciated in Europe than I am here,\u201d he said. Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum\u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office. \u201cI hope the painting seems endless,\u201d Mr. Reed said. \u201cI\u2019m excited about what I\u2019m doing now,\u201d he added. \u201cI just hope I live long enough to be able to explore it. Painting is a long game \u2014 you need a lot of years. I feel like I\u2019m finally getting a feel for certain things and it\u2019s taken me this long to do it.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Indeed, Mr. Reed said he had been more warmly received in Europe where, in a series of recent shows, he explored the concept of the filmstrip in his paintings. \u201cIt\u2019s always been strange to feel that I\u2019m an American painter who\u2019s much more appreciated in Europe than I am here,\u201d he said. Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum\u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office. \u201cI hope the painting seems endless,\u201d Mr. Reed said. \u201cI\u2019m excited about what I\u2019m doing now,\u201d he added. \u201cI just hope I live long enough to be able to explore it. Painting is a long game \u2014 you need a lot of years. I feel like I\u2019m finally getting a feel for certain things and it\u2019s taken me this long to do it.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum\u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office."} +{"question": "Who did Mr. Reed create work for?", "paragraph": "Indeed, Mr. Reed said he had been more warmly received in Europe where, in a series of recent shows, he explored the concept of the filmstrip in his paintings. \u201cIt\u2019s always been strange to feel that I\u2019m an American painter who\u2019s much more appreciated in Europe than I am here,\u201d he said. Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum\u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office. \u201cI hope the painting seems endless,\u201d Mr. Reed said. \u201cI\u2019m excited about what I\u2019m doing now,\u201d he added. \u201cI just hope I live long enough to be able to explore it. Painting is a long game \u2014 you need a lot of years. I feel like I\u2019m finally getting a feel for certain things and it\u2019s taken me this long to do it.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Blum", "sentence": "Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum \u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office.", "paragraph_sentence": "Indeed, Mr. Reed said he had been more warmly received in Europe where, in a series of recent shows, he explored the concept of the filmstrip in his paintings. \u201cIt\u2019s always been strange to feel that I\u2019m an American painter who\u2019s much more appreciated in Europe than I am here,\u201d he said. Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum \u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office. \u201cI hope the painting seems endless,\u201d Mr. Reed said. \u201cI\u2019m excited about what I\u2019m doing now,\u201d he added. \u201cI just hope I live long enough to be able to explore it. Painting is a long game \u2014 you need a lot of years. I feel like I\u2019m finally getting a feel for certain things and it\u2019s taken me this long to do it.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Indeed, Mr. Reed said he had been more warmly received in Europe where, in a series of recent shows, he explored the concept of the filmstrip in his paintings. \u201cIt\u2019s always been strange to feel that I\u2019m an American painter who\u2019s much more appreciated in Europe than I am here,\u201d he said. Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum \u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office. \u201cI hope the painting seems endless,\u201d Mr. Reed said. \u201cI\u2019m excited about what I\u2019m doing now,\u201d he added. \u201cI just hope I live long enough to be able to explore it. Painting is a long game \u2014 you need a lot of years. I feel like I\u2019m finally getting a feel for certain things and it\u2019s taken me this long to do it.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum \u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office."} +{"question": "Who extend a wall through?", "paragraph": "Indeed, Mr. Reed said he had been more warmly received in Europe where, in a series of recent shows, he explored the concept of the filmstrip in his paintings. \u201cIt\u2019s always been strange to feel that I\u2019m an American painter who\u2019s much more appreciated in Europe than I am here,\u201d he said. Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum\u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office. \u201cI hope the painting seems endless,\u201d Mr. Reed said. \u201cI\u2019m excited about what I\u2019m doing now,\u201d he added. \u201cI just hope I live long enough to be able to explore it. Painting is a long game \u2014 you need a lot of years. I feel like I\u2019m finally getting a feel for certain things and it\u2019s taken me this long to do it.\u201d", "answer": "West 57th Street gallery", "sentence": "Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum\u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office.", "paragraph_sentence": "Indeed, Mr. Reed said he had been more warmly received in Europe where, in a series of recent shows, he explored the concept of the filmstrip in his paintings. \u201cIt\u2019s always been strange to feel that I\u2019m an American painter who\u2019s much more appreciated in Europe than I am here,\u201d he said. Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum\u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office. \u201cI hope the painting seems endless,\u201d Mr. Reed said. \u201cI\u2019m excited about what I\u2019m doing now,\u201d he added. \u201cI just hope I live long enough to be able to explore it. Painting is a long game \u2014 you need a lot of years. I feel like I\u2019m finally getting a feel for certain things and it\u2019s taken me this long to do it.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Indeed, Mr. Reed said he had been more warmly received in Europe where, in a series of recent shows, he explored the concept of the filmstrip in his paintings. \u201cIt\u2019s always been strange to feel that I\u2019m an American painter who\u2019s much more appreciated in Europe than I am here,\u201d he said. Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum\u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office. \u201cI hope the painting seems endless,\u201d Mr. Reed said. \u201cI\u2019m excited about what I\u2019m doing now,\u201d he added. \u201cI just hope I live long enough to be able to explore it. Painting is a long game \u2014 you need a lot of years. I feel like I\u2019m finally getting a feel for certain things and it\u2019s taken me this long to do it.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum\u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office."} +{"question": "What is a long game?", "paragraph": "Indeed, Mr. Reed said he had been more warmly received in Europe where, in a series of recent shows, he explored the concept of the filmstrip in his paintings. \u201cIt\u2019s always been strange to feel that I\u2019m an American painter who\u2019s much more appreciated in Europe than I am here,\u201d he said. Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum\u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office. \u201cI hope the painting seems endless,\u201d Mr. Reed said. \u201cI\u2019m excited about what I\u2019m doing now,\u201d he added. \u201cI just hope I live long enough to be able to explore it. Painting is a long game \u2014 you need a lot of years. I feel like I\u2019m finally getting a feel for certain things and it\u2019s taken me this long to do it.\u201d", "answer": "Painting", "sentence": "Painting is a long game \u2014 you need a lot of years.", "paragraph_sentence": "Indeed, Mr. Reed said he had been more warmly received in Europe where, in a series of recent shows, he explored the concept of the filmstrip in his paintings. \u201cIt\u2019s always been strange to feel that I\u2019m an American painter who\u2019s much more appreciated in Europe than I am here,\u201d he said. Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum\u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office. \u201cI hope the painting seems endless,\u201d Mr. Reed said. \u201cI\u2019m excited about what I\u2019m doing now,\u201d he added. \u201cI just hope I live long enough to be able to explore it. Painting is a long game \u2014 you need a lot of years. I feel like I\u2019m finally getting a feel for certain things and it\u2019s taken me this long to do it.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Indeed, Mr. Reed said he had been more warmly received in Europe where, in a series of recent shows, he explored the concept of the filmstrip in his paintings. \u201cIt\u2019s always been strange to feel that I\u2019m an American painter who\u2019s much more appreciated in Europe than I am here,\u201d he said. Mr. Reed is creating a work for Mr. Blum\u2019s West 57th Street gallery \u2014 seven adjacent Technicolor canvases making a 42-foot-long horizontal piece that appears to extend through a wall and into Mr. Blum\u2019s office. \u201cI hope the painting seems endless,\u201d Mr. Reed said. \u201cI\u2019m excited about what I\u2019m doing now,\u201d he added. \u201cI just hope I live long enough to be able to explore it. Painting is a long game \u2014 you need a lot of years. I feel like I\u2019m finally getting a feel for certain things and it\u2019s taken me this long to do it.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Painting is a long game \u2014 you need a lot of years."} +{"question": "She has an extraordinary talent for what?", "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": "Her palette is very unusu", "sentence": "\u201cShe has this extraordinary talent for distilling form, landscape, abstraction and color,\u201d Mr. Kelly said. \u201c Her palette is very unusu al.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cShe has this extraordinary talent for distilling form, landscape, abstraction and color,\u201d Mr. Kelly said. \u201c Her palette is very unusu al. 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. \u201c Her palette is very unusu al. 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": "\u201cShe has this extraordinary talent for distilling form, landscape, abstraction and color,\u201d Mr. Kelly said. \u201c Her palette is very unusu al."} +{"question": "Where does Northern European artists come from?", "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": "Belgian", "sentence": "It has a lot to do with that great tradition of Belgian Northern European artists dealing with a quality of light.\u201d", "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": "It has a lot to do with that great tradition of Belgian Northern European artists dealing with a quality of light.\u201d"} +{"question": "Where was there first solo show located?", "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": "United States", "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."} +{"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."} +{"question": "Where is the gallery?", "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": "10th Avenue", "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."} +{"question": "Who perished on thursday?", "paragraph": "Darryl Dawkins, who arrived in professional basketball as a gigantic teenager and became one of the game\u2019s fiercest dunkers and most notoriously lovable characters, a backboard-smashing, referee-dissing, fun-loving manchild known to fans as Chocolate Thunder from Planet Lovetron, died on Thursday in Allentown, Pa. He was 58. Tracey Sechler, a spokeswoman for Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, confirmed the death. Robert Tyler, a family friend, said the apparent cause was heart failure. One of basketball\u2019s larger-than-life figures \u2014 though at 6-foot-11 and more than 250 pounds he was pretty large to begin with \u2014 Dawkins made his mark on the sport\u2019s history in a number of ways. Selected as an 18-year-old from Orlando, Fla., by the Philadelphia 76ers as the fifth overall choice in the 1975 National Basketball Association draft, he became the first player to make the leap directly from high school to the N.B.A. (He was not the first high schooler to turn pro. A year earlier, Moses Malone had jumped from high school in Virginia to the Utah Stars, a franchise in the American Basketball Association, which merged with the N.B.A. in 1976.)", "answer": "Darryl Dawkins", "sentence": "Darryl Dawkins , who arrived in professional basketball as a gigantic teenager and became one of the game\u2019s fiercest dunkers and most notoriously lovable characters, a backboard-smashing, referee-dissing, fun-loving manchild known to fans as Chocolate Thunder from Planet Lovetron, died on Thursday in Allentown, Pa.", "paragraph_sentence": " Darryl Dawkins , who arrived in professional basketball as a gigantic teenager and became one of the game\u2019s fiercest dunkers and most notoriously lovable characters, a backboard-smashing, referee-dissing, fun-loving manchild known to fans as Chocolate Thunder from Planet Lovetron, died on Thursday in Allentown, Pa. He was 58. Tracey Sechler, a spokeswoman for Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, confirmed the death. Robert Tyler, a family friend, said the apparent cause was heart failure. One of basketball\u2019s larger-than-life figures \u2014 though at 6-foot-11 and more than 250 pounds he was pretty large to begin with \u2014 Dawkins made his mark on the sport\u2019s history in a number of ways. Selected as an 18-year-old from Orlando, Fla., by the Philadelphia 76ers as the fifth overall choice in the 1975 National Basketball Association draft, he became the first player to make the leap directly from high school to the N.B.A. (He was not the first high schooler to turn pro. A year earlier, Moses Malone had jumped from high school in Virginia to the Utah Stars, a franchise in the American Basketball Association, which merged with the N.B.A. in 1976.)", "paragraph_answer": " Darryl Dawkins , who arrived in professional basketball as a gigantic teenager and became one of the game\u2019s fiercest dunkers and most notoriously lovable characters, a backboard-smashing, referee-dissing, fun-loving manchild known to fans as Chocolate Thunder from Planet Lovetron, died on Thursday in Allentown, Pa. He was 58. Tracey Sechler, a spokeswoman for Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, confirmed the death. Robert Tyler, a family friend, said the apparent cause was heart failure. One of basketball\u2019s larger-than-life figures \u2014 though at 6-foot-11 and more than 250 pounds he was pretty large to begin with \u2014 Dawkins made his mark on the sport\u2019s history in a number of ways. Selected as an 18-year-old from Orlando, Fla., by the Philadelphia 76ers as the fifth overall choice in the 1975 National Basketball Association draft, he became the first player to make the leap directly from high school to the N.B.A. (He was not the first high schooler to turn pro. A year earlier, Moses Malone had jumped from high school in Virginia to the Utah Stars, a franchise in the American Basketball Association, which merged with the N.B.A. in 1976.)", "sentence_answer": " Darryl Dawkins , who arrived in professional basketball as a gigantic teenager and became one of the game\u2019s fiercest dunkers and most notoriously lovable characters, a backboard-smashing, referee-dissing, fun-loving manchild known to fans as Chocolate Thunder from Planet Lovetron, died on Thursday in Allentown, Pa."} +{"question": "What was Darryl Dawkins nickname?", "paragraph": "Darryl Dawkins, who arrived in professional basketball as a gigantic teenager and became one of the game\u2019s fiercest dunkers and most notoriously lovable characters, a backboard-smashing, referee-dissing, fun-loving manchild known to fans as Chocolate Thunder from Planet Lovetron, died on Thursday in Allentown, Pa. He was 58. Tracey Sechler, a spokeswoman for Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, confirmed the death. Robert Tyler, a family friend, said the apparent cause was heart failure. One of basketball\u2019s larger-than-life figures \u2014 though at 6-foot-11 and more than 250 pounds he was pretty large to begin with \u2014 Dawkins made his mark on the sport\u2019s history in a number of ways. Selected as an 18-year-old from Orlando, Fla., by the Philadelphia 76ers as the fifth overall choice in the 1975 National Basketball Association draft, he became the first player to make the leap directly from high school to the N.B.A. (He was not the first high schooler to turn pro. A year earlier, Moses Malone had jumped from high school in Virginia to the Utah Stars, a franchise in the American Basketball Association, which merged with the N.B.A. in 1976.)", "answer": "Chocolate Thunder from Planet Lovetron", "sentence": "Darryl Dawkins, who arrived in professional basketball as a gigantic teenager and became one of the game\u2019s fiercest dunkers and most notoriously lovable characters, a backboard-smashing, referee-dissing, fun-loving manchild known to fans as Chocolate Thunder from Planet Lovetron , died on Thursday in Allentown, Pa.", "paragraph_sentence": " Darryl Dawkins, who arrived in professional basketball as a gigantic teenager and became one of the game\u2019s fiercest dunkers and most notoriously lovable characters, a backboard-smashing, referee-dissing, fun-loving manchild known to fans as Chocolate Thunder from Planet Lovetron , died on Thursday in Allentown, Pa. He was 58. Tracey Sechler, a spokeswoman for Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, confirmed the death. Robert Tyler, a family friend, said the apparent cause was heart failure. One of basketball\u2019s larger-than-life figures \u2014 though at 6-foot-11 and more than 250 pounds he was pretty large to begin with \u2014 Dawkins made his mark on the sport\u2019s history in a number of ways. Selected as an 18-year-old from Orlando, Fla., by the Philadelphia 76ers as the fifth overall choice in the 1975 National Basketball Association draft, he became the first player to make the leap directly from high school to the N.B.A. (He was not the first high schooler to turn pro. A year earlier, Moses Malone had jumped from high school in Virginia to the Utah Stars, a franchise in the American Basketball Association, which merged with the N.B.A. in 1976.)", "paragraph_answer": "Darryl Dawkins, who arrived in professional basketball as a gigantic teenager and became one of the game\u2019s fiercest dunkers and most notoriously lovable characters, a backboard-smashing, referee-dissing, fun-loving manchild known to fans as Chocolate Thunder from Planet Lovetron , died on Thursday in Allentown, Pa. He was 58. Tracey Sechler, a spokeswoman for Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, confirmed the death. Robert Tyler, a family friend, said the apparent cause was heart failure. One of basketball\u2019s larger-than-life figures \u2014 though at 6-foot-11 and more than 250 pounds he was pretty large to begin with \u2014 Dawkins made his mark on the sport\u2019s history in a number of ways. Selected as an 18-year-old from Orlando, Fla., by the Philadelphia 76ers as the fifth overall choice in the 1975 National Basketball Association draft, he became the first player to make the leap directly from high school to the N.B.A. (He was not the first high schooler to turn pro. A year earlier, Moses Malone had jumped from high school in Virginia to the Utah Stars, a franchise in the American Basketball Association, which merged with the N.B.A. in 1976.)", "sentence_answer": "Darryl Dawkins, who arrived in professional basketball as a gigantic teenager and became one of the game\u2019s fiercest dunkers and most notoriously lovable characters, a backboard-smashing, referee-dissing, fun-loving manchild known to fans as Chocolate Thunder from Planet Lovetron , died on Thursday in Allentown, Pa."} +{"question": "Who was on good terms with Darryl Dawkins?", "paragraph": "Darryl Dawkins, who arrived in professional basketball as a gigantic teenager and became one of the game\u2019s fiercest dunkers and most notoriously lovable characters, a backboard-smashing, referee-dissing, fun-loving manchild known to fans as Chocolate Thunder from Planet Lovetron, died on Thursday in Allentown, Pa. He was 58. Tracey Sechler, a spokeswoman for Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, confirmed the death. Robert Tyler, a family friend, said the apparent cause was heart failure. One of basketball\u2019s larger-than-life figures \u2014 though at 6-foot-11 and more than 250 pounds he was pretty large to begin with \u2014 Dawkins made his mark on the sport\u2019s history in a number of ways. Selected as an 18-year-old from Orlando, Fla., by the Philadelphia 76ers as the fifth overall choice in the 1975 National Basketball Association draft, he became the first player to make the leap directly from high school to the N.B.A. (He was not the first high schooler to turn pro. A year earlier, Moses Malone had jumped from high school in Virginia to the Utah Stars, a franchise in the American Basketball Association, which merged with the N.B.A. in 1976.)", "answer": "Robert Tyler", "sentence": "Robert Tyler , a family friend, said the apparent cause was heart failure.", "paragraph_sentence": "Darryl Dawkins, who arrived in professional basketball as a gigantic teenager and became one of the game\u2019s fiercest dunkers and most notoriously lovable characters, a backboard-smashing, referee-dissing, fun-loving manchild known to fans as Chocolate Thunder from Planet Lovetron, died on Thursday in Allentown, Pa. He was 58. Tracey Sechler, a spokeswoman for Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, confirmed the death. Robert Tyler , a family friend, said the apparent cause was heart failure. One of basketball\u2019s larger-than-life figures \u2014 though at 6-foot-11 and more than 250 pounds he was pretty large to begin with \u2014 Dawkins made his mark on the sport\u2019s history in a number of ways. Selected as an 18-year-old from Orlando, Fla., by the Philadelphia 76ers as the fifth overall choice in the 1975 National Basketball Association draft, he became the first player to make the leap directly from high school to the N.B.A. (He was not the first high schooler to turn pro. A year earlier, Moses Malone had jumped from high school in Virginia to the Utah Stars, a franchise in the American Basketball Association, which merged with the N.B.A. in 1976.)", "paragraph_answer": "Darryl Dawkins, who arrived in professional basketball as a gigantic teenager and became one of the game\u2019s fiercest dunkers and most notoriously lovable characters, a backboard-smashing, referee-dissing, fun-loving manchild known to fans as Chocolate Thunder from Planet Lovetron, died on Thursday in Allentown, Pa. He was 58. Tracey Sechler, a spokeswoman for Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, confirmed the death. Robert Tyler , a family friend, said the apparent cause was heart failure. One of basketball\u2019s larger-than-life figures \u2014 though at 6-foot-11 and more than 250 pounds he was pretty large to begin with \u2014 Dawkins made his mark on the sport\u2019s history in a number of ways. Selected as an 18-year-old from Orlando, Fla., by the Philadelphia 76ers as the fifth overall choice in the 1975 National Basketball Association draft, he became the first player to make the leap directly from high school to the N.B.A. (He was not the first high schooler to turn pro. A year earlier, Moses Malone had jumped from high school in Virginia to the Utah Stars, a franchise in the American Basketball Association, which merged with the N.B.A. in 1976.)", "sentence_answer": " Robert Tyler , a family friend, said the apparent cause was heart failure."} +{"question": "What killed Darryl Dawkins?", "paragraph": "Darryl Dawkins, who arrived in professional basketball as a gigantic teenager and became one of the game\u2019s fiercest dunkers and most notoriously lovable characters, a backboard-smashing, referee-dissing, fun-loving manchild known to fans as Chocolate Thunder from Planet Lovetron, died on Thursday in Allentown, Pa. He was 58. Tracey Sechler, a spokeswoman for Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, confirmed the death. Robert Tyler, a family friend, said the apparent cause was heart failure. One of basketball\u2019s larger-than-life figures \u2014 though at 6-foot-11 and more than 250 pounds he was pretty large to begin with \u2014 Dawkins made his mark on the sport\u2019s history in a number of ways. Selected as an 18-year-old from Orlando, Fla., by the Philadelphia 76ers as the fifth overall choice in the 1975 National Basketball Association draft, he became the first player to make the leap directly from high school to the N.B.A. (He was not the first high schooler to turn pro. A year earlier, Moses Malone had jumped from high school in Virginia to the Utah Stars, a franchise in the American Basketball Association, which merged with the N.B.A. in 1976.)", "answer": "heart failure", "sentence": "Robert Tyler, a family friend, said the apparent cause was heart failure .", "paragraph_sentence": "Darryl Dawkins, who arrived in professional basketball as a gigantic teenager and became one of the game\u2019s fiercest dunkers and most notoriously lovable characters, a backboard-smashing, referee-dissing, fun-loving manchild known to fans as Chocolate Thunder from Planet Lovetron, died on Thursday in Allentown, Pa. He was 58. Tracey Sechler, a spokeswoman for Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, confirmed the death. Robert Tyler, a family friend, said the apparent cause was heart failure . One of basketball\u2019s larger-than-life figures \u2014 though at 6-foot-11 and more than 250 pounds he was pretty large to begin with \u2014 Dawkins made his mark on the sport\u2019s history in a number of ways. Selected as an 18-year-old from Orlando, Fla., by the Philadelphia 76ers as the fifth overall choice in the 1975 National Basketball Association draft, he became the first player to make the leap directly from high school to the N.B.A. (He was not the first high schooler to turn pro. A year earlier, Moses Malone had jumped from high school in Virginia to the Utah Stars, a franchise in the American Basketball Association, which merged with the N.B.A. in 1976.)", "paragraph_answer": "Darryl Dawkins, who arrived in professional basketball as a gigantic teenager and became one of the game\u2019s fiercest dunkers and most notoriously lovable characters, a backboard-smashing, referee-dissing, fun-loving manchild known to fans as Chocolate Thunder from Planet Lovetron, died on Thursday in Allentown, Pa. He was 58. Tracey Sechler, a spokeswoman for Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, confirmed the death. Robert Tyler, a family friend, said the apparent cause was heart failure . One of basketball\u2019s larger-than-life figures \u2014 though at 6-foot-11 and more than 250 pounds he was pretty large to begin with \u2014 Dawkins made his mark on the sport\u2019s history in a number of ways. Selected as an 18-year-old from Orlando, Fla., by the Philadelphia 76ers as the fifth overall choice in the 1975 National Basketball Association draft, he became the first player to make the leap directly from high school to the N.B.A. (He was not the first high schooler to turn pro. A year earlier, Moses Malone had jumped from high school in Virginia to the Utah Stars, a franchise in the American Basketball Association, which merged with the N.B.A. in 1976.)", "sentence_answer": "Robert Tyler, a family friend, said the apparent cause was heart failure ."} +{"question": "Who selected Darryl for their team team?", "paragraph": "Darryl Dawkins, who arrived in professional basketball as a gigantic teenager and became one of the game\u2019s fiercest dunkers and most notoriously lovable characters, a backboard-smashing, referee-dissing, fun-loving manchild known to fans as Chocolate Thunder from Planet Lovetron, died on Thursday in Allentown, Pa. He was 58. Tracey Sechler, a spokeswoman for Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, confirmed the death. Robert Tyler, a family friend, said the apparent cause was heart failure. One of basketball\u2019s larger-than-life figures \u2014 though at 6-foot-11 and more than 250 pounds he was pretty large to begin with \u2014 Dawkins made his mark on the sport\u2019s history in a number of ways. Selected as an 18-year-old from Orlando, Fla., by the Philadelphia 76ers as the fifth overall choice in the 1975 National Basketball Association draft, he became the first player to make the leap directly from high school to the N.B.A. (He was not the first high schooler to turn pro. A year earlier, Moses Malone had jumped from high school in Virginia to the Utah Stars, a franchise in the American Basketball Association, which merged with the N.B.A. in 1976.)", "answer": "Philadelphia 76ers", "sentence": "Selected as an 18-year-old from Orlando, Fla., by the Philadelphia 76ers as the fifth overall choice in the 1975 National Basketball Association draft, he became the first player to make the leap directly from high school to the N.B.A. (He was not the first high schooler to turn pro.", "paragraph_sentence": "Darryl Dawkins, who arrived in professional basketball as a gigantic teenager and became one of the game\u2019s fiercest dunkers and most notoriously lovable characters, a backboard-smashing, referee-dissing, fun-loving manchild known to fans as Chocolate Thunder from Planet Lovetron, died on Thursday in Allentown, Pa. He was 58. Tracey Sechler, a spokeswoman for Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, confirmed the death. Robert Tyler, a family friend, said the apparent cause was heart failure. One of basketball\u2019s larger-than-life figures \u2014 though at 6-foot-11 and more than 250 pounds he was pretty large to begin with \u2014 Dawkins made his mark on the sport\u2019s history in a number of ways. Selected as an 18-year-old from Orlando, Fla., by the Philadelphia 76ers as the fifth overall choice in the 1975 National Basketball Association draft, he became the first player to make the leap directly from high school to the N.B.A. (He was not the first high schooler to turn pro. A year earlier, Moses Malone had jumped from high school in Virginia to the Utah Stars, a franchise in the American Basketball Association, which merged with the N.B.A. in 1976.)", "paragraph_answer": "Darryl Dawkins, who arrived in professional basketball as a gigantic teenager and became one of the game\u2019s fiercest dunkers and most notoriously lovable characters, a backboard-smashing, referee-dissing, fun-loving manchild known to fans as Chocolate Thunder from Planet Lovetron, died on Thursday in Allentown, Pa. He was 58. Tracey Sechler, a spokeswoman for Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, confirmed the death. Robert Tyler, a family friend, said the apparent cause was heart failure. One of basketball\u2019s larger-than-life figures \u2014 though at 6-foot-11 and more than 250 pounds he was pretty large to begin with \u2014 Dawkins made his mark on the sport\u2019s history in a number of ways. Selected as an 18-year-old from Orlando, Fla., by the Philadelphia 76ers as the fifth overall choice in the 1975 National Basketball Association draft, he became the first player to make the leap directly from high school to the N.B.A. (He was not the first high schooler to turn pro. A year earlier, Moses Malone had jumped from high school in Virginia to the Utah Stars, a franchise in the American Basketball Association, which merged with the N.B.A. in 1976.)", "sentence_answer": "Selected as an 18-year-old from Orlando, Fla., by the Philadelphia 76ers as the fifth overall choice in the 1975 National Basketball Association draft, he became the first player to make the leap directly from high school to the N.B.A. (He was not the first high schooler to turn pro."} +{"question": "Who did Dawkins remind people of?", "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": "Wilt Chamberlain", "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 .", "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": "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 ."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What did Dawkins like to wear?", "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": "an electric lime-green suit", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "Did Dawkins dabble in music?", "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": "and fond of rhyming and hyperbolic fantasy musings.", "sentence": "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.)", "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": "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.)"} +{"question": "What were his typical basketball stats?", "paragraph": "He also played for the New Jersey Nets (now the Brooklyn Nets), the Utah Jazz and the Detroit Pistons. For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game. More notably, he led the league three times in personal fouls, testimony to his ferocious inside play (and possibly because the refs were never crazy about him), and because he dunked so often and shot well from midrange, his career shooting percentage, .572, is the seventh highest in league history. Darryl Dawkins was born in Orlando on Jan. 11, 1957. He was raised mostly by his mother, the former Harriet James, though Mr. Tyler, his friend, said he remained close to his father, Frank Dawkins. He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975.", "answer": "12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game", "sentence": "For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game .", "paragraph_sentence": "He also played for the New Jersey Nets (now the Brooklyn Nets), the Utah Jazz and the Detroit Pistons. For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game . More notably, he led the league three times in personal fouls, testimony to his ferocious inside play (and possibly because the refs were never crazy about him), and because he dunked so often and shot well from midrange, his career shooting percentage, .572, is the seventh highest in league history. Darryl Dawkins was born in Orlando on Jan. 11, 1957. He was raised mostly by his mother, the former Harriet James, though Mr. Tyler, his friend, said he remained close to his father, Frank Dawkins. He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975.", "paragraph_answer": "He also played for the New Jersey Nets (now the Brooklyn Nets), the Utah Jazz and the Detroit Pistons. For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game . More notably, he led the league three times in personal fouls, testimony to his ferocious inside play (and possibly because the refs were never crazy about him), and because he dunked so often and shot well from midrange, his career shooting percentage, .572, is the seventh highest in league history. Darryl Dawkins was born in Orlando on Jan. 11, 1957. He was raised mostly by his mother, the former Harriet James, though Mr. Tyler, his friend, said he remained close to his father, Frank Dawkins. He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975.", "sentence_answer": "For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game ."} +{"question": "Was he popular with game moderators?", "paragraph": "He also played for the New Jersey Nets (now the Brooklyn Nets), the Utah Jazz and the Detroit Pistons. For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game. More notably, he led the league three times in personal fouls, testimony to his ferocious inside play (and possibly because the refs were never crazy about him), and because he dunked so often and shot well from midrange, his career shooting percentage, .572, is the seventh highest in league history. Darryl Dawkins was born in Orlando on Jan. 11, 1957. He was raised mostly by his mother, the former Harriet James, though Mr. Tyler, his friend, said he remained close to his father, Frank Dawkins. He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975.", "answer": "the refs were never crazy about him", "sentence": "More notably, he led the league three times in personal fouls, testimony to his ferocious inside play (and possibly because the refs were never crazy about him ), and because he dunked so often and shot well from midrange, his career shooting percentage, .572, is the seventh highest in league history.", "paragraph_sentence": "He also played for the New Jersey Nets (now the Brooklyn Nets), the Utah Jazz and the Detroit Pistons. For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game. More notably, he led the league three times in personal fouls, testimony to his ferocious inside play (and possibly because the refs were never crazy about him ), and because he dunked so often and shot well from midrange, his career shooting percentage, .572, is the seventh highest in league history. Darryl Dawkins was born in Orlando on Jan. 11, 1957. He was raised mostly by his mother, the former Harriet James, though Mr. Tyler, his friend, said he remained close to his father, Frank Dawkins. He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975.", "paragraph_answer": "He also played for the New Jersey Nets (now the Brooklyn Nets), the Utah Jazz and the Detroit Pistons. For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game. More notably, he led the league three times in personal fouls, testimony to his ferocious inside play (and possibly because the refs were never crazy about him ), and because he dunked so often and shot well from midrange, his career shooting percentage, .572, is the seventh highest in league history. Darryl Dawkins was born in Orlando on Jan. 11, 1957. He was raised mostly by his mother, the former Harriet James, though Mr. Tyler, his friend, said he remained close to his father, Frank Dawkins. He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975.", "sentence_answer": "More notably, he led the league three times in personal fouls, testimony to his ferocious inside play (and possibly because the refs were never crazy about him ), and because he dunked so often and shot well from midrange, his career shooting percentage, .572, is the seventh highest in league history."} +{"question": "When was he introduced to the world?", "paragraph": "He also played for the New Jersey Nets (now the Brooklyn Nets), the Utah Jazz and the Detroit Pistons. For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game. More notably, he led the league three times in personal fouls, testimony to his ferocious inside play (and possibly because the refs were never crazy about him), and because he dunked so often and shot well from midrange, his career shooting percentage, .572, is the seventh highest in league history. Darryl Dawkins was born in Orlando on Jan. 11, 1957. He was raised mostly by his mother, the former Harriet James, though Mr. Tyler, his friend, said he remained close to his father, Frank Dawkins. He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975.", "answer": "Jan. 11, 1957", "sentence": "Darryl Dawkins was born in Orlando on Jan. 11, 1957 .", "paragraph_sentence": "He also played for the New Jersey Nets (now the Brooklyn Nets), the Utah Jazz and the Detroit Pistons. For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game. More notably, he led the league three times in personal fouls, testimony to his ferocious inside play (and possibly because the refs were never crazy about him), and because he dunked so often and shot well from midrange, his career shooting percentage, .572, is the seventh highest in league history. Darryl Dawkins was born in Orlando on Jan. 11, 1957 . He was raised mostly by his mother, the former Harriet James, though Mr. Tyler, his friend, said he remained close to his father, Frank Dawkins. He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975.", "paragraph_answer": "He also played for the New Jersey Nets (now the Brooklyn Nets), the Utah Jazz and the Detroit Pistons. For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game. More notably, he led the league three times in personal fouls, testimony to his ferocious inside play (and possibly because the refs were never crazy about him), and because he dunked so often and shot well from midrange, his career shooting percentage, .572, is the seventh highest in league history. Darryl Dawkins was born in Orlando on Jan. 11, 1957 . He was raised mostly by his mother, the former Harriet James, though Mr. Tyler, his friend, said he remained close to his father, Frank Dawkins. He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975.", "sentence_answer": "Darryl Dawkins was born in Orlando on Jan. 11, 1957 ."} +{"question": "What team did he help to the state championship?", "paragraph": "He also played for the New Jersey Nets (now the Brooklyn Nets), the Utah Jazz and the Detroit Pistons. For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game. More notably, he led the league three times in personal fouls, testimony to his ferocious inside play (and possibly because the refs were never crazy about him), and because he dunked so often and shot well from midrange, his career shooting percentage, .572, is the seventh highest in league history. Darryl Dawkins was born in Orlando on Jan. 11, 1957. He was raised mostly by his mother, the former Harriet James, though Mr. Tyler, his friend, said he remained close to his father, Frank Dawkins. He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975.", "answer": "Maynard Evans High School", "sentence": "He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975.", "paragraph_sentence": "He also played for the New Jersey Nets (now the Brooklyn Nets), the Utah Jazz and the Detroit Pistons. For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game. More notably, he led the league three times in personal fouls, testimony to his ferocious inside play (and possibly because the refs were never crazy about him), and because he dunked so often and shot well from midrange, his career shooting percentage, .572, is the seventh highest in league history. Darryl Dawkins was born in Orlando on Jan. 11, 1957. He was raised mostly by his mother, the former Harriet James, though Mr. Tyler, his friend, said he remained close to his father, Frank Dawkins. He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975. ", "paragraph_answer": "He also played for the New Jersey Nets (now the Brooklyn Nets), the Utah Jazz and the Detroit Pistons. For his career, he averaged 12 points and 6.1 rebounds per game. More notably, he led the league three times in personal fouls, testimony to his ferocious inside play (and possibly because the refs were never crazy about him), and because he dunked so often and shot well from midrange, his career shooting percentage, .572, is the seventh highest in league history. Darryl Dawkins was born in Orlando on Jan. 11, 1957. He was raised mostly by his mother, the former Harriet James, though Mr. Tyler, his friend, said he remained close to his father, Frank Dawkins. He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975.", "sentence_answer": "He led Maynard Evans High School in Orlando to the Florida state championship in 1975."} +{"question": "Did Dawkins play outside of the US?", "paragraph": "After his N.B.A. career ended, Dawkins played professionally in Italy and spent a year with the Harlem Globetrotters. In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown, where he met Janice Hoderman, who became his fourth wife in 2001. A gentle giant in his later years, Dawkins also coached the basketball team at Lehigh Carbon Community College in Schnecksville, Pa., not far from Allentown, where he lived. In addition to his wife, his survivors include their son, Nicholas, and daughter, Alexis; a stepdaughter, Tabitha; a daughter from a previous marriage, Dara; his mother; and several siblings.", "answer": "Italy and spent a year with the Harlem Globetrotters", "sentence": "After his N.B.A. career ended, Dawkins played professionally in Italy and spent a year with the Harlem Globetrotters .", "paragraph_sentence": " After his N.B.A. career ended, Dawkins played professionally in Italy and spent a year with the Harlem Globetrotters . In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown, where he met Janice Hoderman, who became his fourth wife in 2001. A gentle giant in his later years, Dawkins also coached the basketball team at Lehigh Carbon Community College in Schnecksville, Pa., not far from Allentown, where he lived. In addition to his wife, his survivors include their son, Nicholas, and daughter, Alexis; a stepdaughter, Tabitha; a daughter from a previous marriage, Dara; his mother; and several siblings.", "paragraph_answer": "After his N.B.A. career ended, Dawkins played professionally in Italy and spent a year with the Harlem Globetrotters . In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown, where he met Janice Hoderman, who became his fourth wife in 2001. A gentle giant in his later years, Dawkins also coached the basketball team at Lehigh Carbon Community College in Schnecksville, Pa., not far from Allentown, where he lived. In addition to his wife, his survivors include their son, Nicholas, and daughter, Alexis; a stepdaughter, Tabitha; a daughter from a previous marriage, Dara; his mother; and several siblings.", "sentence_answer": "After his N.B.A. career ended, Dawkins played professionally in Italy and spent a year with the Harlem Globetrotters ."} +{"question": "Did Dawkins try his luck with professional coaching?", "paragraph": "After his N.B.A. career ended, Dawkins played professionally in Italy and spent a year with the Harlem Globetrotters. In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown, where he met Janice Hoderman, who became his fourth wife in 2001. A gentle giant in his later years, Dawkins also coached the basketball team at Lehigh Carbon Community College in Schnecksville, Pa., not far from Allentown, where he lived. In addition to his wife, his survivors include their son, Nicholas, and daughter, Alexis; a stepdaughter, Tabitha; a daughter from a previous marriage, Dara; his mother; and several siblings.", "answer": "professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown", "sentence": "In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown , where he met Janice Hoderman, who became his fourth wife in 2001.", "paragraph_sentence": "After his N.B.A. career ended, Dawkins played professionally in Italy and spent a year with the Harlem Globetrotters. In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown , where he met Janice Hoderman, who became his fourth wife in 2001. A gentle giant in his later years, Dawkins also coached the basketball team at Lehigh Carbon Community College in Schnecksville, Pa., not far from Allentown, where he lived. In addition to his wife, his survivors include their son, Nicholas, and daughter, Alexis; a stepdaughter, Tabitha; a daughter from a previous marriage, Dara; his mother; and several siblings.", "paragraph_answer": "After his N.B.A. career ended, Dawkins played professionally in Italy and spent a year with the Harlem Globetrotters. In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown , where he met Janice Hoderman, who became his fourth wife in 2001. A gentle giant in his later years, Dawkins also coached the basketball team at Lehigh Carbon Community College in Schnecksville, Pa., not far from Allentown, where he lived. In addition to his wife, his survivors include their son, Nicholas, and daughter, Alexis; a stepdaughter, Tabitha; a daughter from a previous marriage, Dara; his mother; and several siblings.", "sentence_answer": "In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown , where he met Janice Hoderman, who became his fourth wife in 2001."} +{"question": "Did Dawkins have a family?", "paragraph": "After his N.B.A. career ended, Dawkins played professionally in Italy and spent a year with the Harlem Globetrotters. In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown, where he met Janice Hoderman, who became his fourth wife in 2001. A gentle giant in his later years, Dawkins also coached the basketball team at Lehigh Carbon Community College in Schnecksville, Pa., not far from Allentown, where he lived. In addition to his wife, his survivors include their son, Nicholas, and daughter, Alexis; a stepdaughter, Tabitha; a daughter from a previous marriage, Dara; his mother; and several siblings.", "answer": "son, Nicholas, and daughter, Alexis; a stepdaughter, Tabitha; a daughter from a previous marriage, Dara; his mother; and several siblings", "sentence": "In addition to his wife, his survivors include their son, Nicholas, and daughter, Alexis; a stepdaughter, Tabitha; a daughter from a previous marriage, Dara; his mother; and several siblings .", "paragraph_sentence": "After his N.B.A. career ended, Dawkins played professionally in Italy and spent a year with the Harlem Globetrotters. In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown, where he met Janice Hoderman, who became his fourth wife in 2001. A gentle giant in his later years, Dawkins also coached the basketball team at Lehigh Carbon Community College in Schnecksville, Pa., not far from Allentown, where he lived. In addition to his wife, his survivors include their son, Nicholas, and daughter, Alexis; a stepdaughter, Tabitha; a daughter from a previous marriage, Dara; his mother; and several siblings . ", "paragraph_answer": "After his N.B.A. career ended, Dawkins played professionally in Italy and spent a year with the Harlem Globetrotters. In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown, where he met Janice Hoderman, who became his fourth wife in 2001. A gentle giant in his later years, Dawkins also coached the basketball team at Lehigh Carbon Community College in Schnecksville, Pa., not far from Allentown, where he lived. In addition to his wife, his survivors include their son, Nicholas, and daughter, Alexis; a stepdaughter, Tabitha; a daughter from a previous marriage, Dara; his mother; and several siblings .", "sentence_answer": "In addition to his wife, his survivors include their son, Nicholas, and daughter, Alexis; a stepdaughter, Tabitha; a daughter from a previous marriage, Dara; his mother; and several siblings ."} +{"question": "In what year did Dawkins marry for the fourth time?", "paragraph": "After his N.B.A. career ended, Dawkins played professionally in Italy and spent a year with the Harlem Globetrotters. In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown, where he met Janice Hoderman, who became his fourth wife in 2001. A gentle giant in his later years, Dawkins also coached the basketball team at Lehigh Carbon Community College in Schnecksville, Pa., not far from Allentown, where he lived. In addition to his wife, his survivors include their son, Nicholas, and daughter, Alexis; a stepdaughter, Tabitha; a daughter from a previous marriage, Dara; his mother; and several siblings.", "answer": "2001", "sentence": "In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown, where he met Janice Hoderman, who became his fourth wife in 2001 .", "paragraph_sentence": "After his N.B.A. career ended, Dawkins played professionally in Italy and spent a year with the Harlem Globetrotters. In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown, where he met Janice Hoderman, who became his fourth wife in 2001 . A gentle giant in his later years, Dawkins also coached the basketball team at Lehigh Carbon Community College in Schnecksville, Pa., not far from Allentown, where he lived. In addition to his wife, his survivors include their son, Nicholas, and daughter, Alexis; a stepdaughter, Tabitha; a daughter from a previous marriage, Dara; his mother; and several siblings.", "paragraph_answer": "After his N.B.A. career ended, Dawkins played professionally in Italy and spent a year with the Harlem Globetrotters. In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown, where he met Janice Hoderman, who became his fourth wife in 2001 . A gentle giant in his later years, Dawkins also coached the basketball team at Lehigh Carbon Community College in Schnecksville, Pa., not far from Allentown, where he lived. In addition to his wife, his survivors include their son, Nicholas, and daughter, Alexis; a stepdaughter, Tabitha; a daughter from a previous marriage, Dara; his mother; and several siblings.", "sentence_answer": "In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown, where he met Janice Hoderman, who became his fourth wife in 2001 ."} +{"question": "Who was Dawkins fourth marriage partner?", "paragraph": "After his N.B.A. career ended, Dawkins played professionally in Italy and spent a year with the Harlem Globetrotters. In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown, where he met Janice Hoderman, who became his fourth wife in 2001. A gentle giant in his later years, Dawkins also coached the basketball team at Lehigh Carbon Community College in Schnecksville, Pa., not far from Allentown, where he lived. In addition to his wife, his survivors include their son, Nicholas, and daughter, Alexis; a stepdaughter, Tabitha; a daughter from a previous marriage, Dara; his mother; and several siblings.", "answer": "Janice Hoderman", "sentence": "In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown, where he met Janice Hoderman , who became his fourth wife in 2001.", "paragraph_sentence": "After his N.B.A. career ended, Dawkins played professionally in Italy and spent a year with the Harlem Globetrotters. In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown, where he met Janice Hoderman , who became his fourth wife in 2001. A gentle giant in his later years, Dawkins also coached the basketball team at Lehigh Carbon Community College in Schnecksville, Pa., not far from Allentown, where he lived. In addition to his wife, his survivors include their son, Nicholas, and daughter, Alexis; a stepdaughter, Tabitha; a daughter from a previous marriage, Dara; his mother; and several siblings.", "paragraph_answer": "After his N.B.A. career ended, Dawkins played professionally in Italy and spent a year with the Harlem Globetrotters. In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown, where he met Janice Hoderman , who became his fourth wife in 2001. A gentle giant in his later years, Dawkins also coached the basketball team at Lehigh Carbon Community College in Schnecksville, Pa., not far from Allentown, where he lived. In addition to his wife, his survivors include their son, Nicholas, and daughter, Alexis; a stepdaughter, Tabitha; a daughter from a previous marriage, Dara; his mother; and several siblings.", "sentence_answer": "In recent years he coached professional teams in Winnipeg and in Allentown, where he met Janice Hoderman , who became his fourth wife in 2001."} +{"question": "Did Dawkins break any rims after upgrades were introduced?", "paragraph": "Not long after Dawkins\u2019s backboard-shattering spree, the league introduced the so-called breakaway rim, which yields to downward pressure and then snaps back to the horizontal, minimizing the potential for destruction. \u201cThe first one was an accident, but I wanted to see if I could do it again when I got back to Philadelphia,\u201d Dawkins recalled in the 2004 Times interview, referring to his most smashingly spectacular dunks. \u201cAll the fans were hollering, \u2018You\u2019ve got to do one for the home crowd,\u2019 so I went ahead and brought it down.", "answer": "The first one was an accident, but I wanted to see if I could do it again when I got back to Philadelphia,", "sentence": "\u201c The first one was an accident, but I wanted to see if I could do it again when I got back to Philadelphia, \u201d Dawkins recalled in the 2004 Times interview, referring to his most smashingly spectacular dunks.", "paragraph_sentence": "Not long after Dawkins\u2019s backboard-shattering spree, the league introduced the so-called breakaway rim, which yields to downward pressure and then snaps back to the horizontal, minimizing the potential for destruction. \u201c The first one was an accident, but I wanted to see if I could do it again when I got back to Philadelphia, \u201d Dawkins recalled in the 2004 Times interview, referring to his most smashingly spectacular dunks. \u201cAll the fans were hollering, \u2018You\u2019ve got to do one for the home crowd,\u2019 so I went ahead and brought it down.", "paragraph_answer": "Not long after Dawkins\u2019s backboard-shattering spree, the league introduced the so-called breakaway rim, which yields to downward pressure and then snaps back to the horizontal, minimizing the potential for destruction. \u201c The first one was an accident, but I wanted to see if I could do it again when I got back to Philadelphia, \u201d Dawkins recalled in the 2004 Times interview, referring to his most smashingly spectacular dunks. \u201cAll the fans were hollering, \u2018You\u2019ve got to do one for the home crowd,\u2019 so I went ahead and brought it down.", "sentence_answer": "\u201c The first one was an accident, but I wanted to see if I could do it again when I got back to Philadelphia, \u201d Dawkins recalled in the 2004 Times interview, referring to his most smashingly spectacular dunks."} +{"question": "Were Dawkins scoring moves popular?", "paragraph": "Not long after Dawkins\u2019s backboard-shattering spree, the league introduced the so-called breakaway rim, which yields to downward pressure and then snaps back to the horizontal, minimizing the potential for destruction. \u201cThe first one was an accident, but I wanted to see if I could do it again when I got back to Philadelphia,\u201d Dawkins recalled in the 2004 Times interview, referring to his most smashingly spectacular dunks. \u201cAll the fans were hollering, \u2018You\u2019ve got to do one for the home crowd,\u2019 so I went ahead and brought it down.", "answer": "\u201cAll the fans were hollering, \u2018You\u2019ve got to do one for the home crowd,\u2019", "sentence": "\u201cAll the fans were hollering, \u2018You\u2019ve got to do one for the home crowd,\u2019 so I went ahead and brought it down.", "paragraph_sentence": "Not long after Dawkins\u2019s backboard-shattering spree, the league introduced the so-called breakaway rim, which yields to downward pressure and then snaps back to the horizontal, minimizing the potential for destruction. \u201cThe first one was an accident, but I wanted to see if I could do it again when I got back to Philadelphia,\u201d Dawkins recalled in the 2004 Times interview, referring to his most smashingly spectacular dunks. \u201cAll the fans were hollering, \u2018You\u2019ve got to do one for the home crowd,\u2019 so I went ahead and brought it down. ", "paragraph_answer": "Not long after Dawkins\u2019s backboard-shattering spree, the league introduced the so-called breakaway rim, which yields to downward pressure and then snaps back to the horizontal, minimizing the potential for destruction. \u201cThe first one was an accident, but I wanted to see if I could do it again when I got back to Philadelphia,\u201d Dawkins recalled in the 2004 Times interview, referring to his most smashingly spectacular dunks. \u201cAll the fans were hollering, \u2018You\u2019ve got to do one for the home crowd,\u2019 so I went ahead and brought it down.", "sentence_answer": " \u201cAll the fans were hollering, \u2018You\u2019ve got to do one for the home crowd,\u2019 so I went ahead and brought it down."} +{"question": "When did Times talk to Dawkins?", "paragraph": "Not long after Dawkins\u2019s backboard-shattering spree, the league introduced the so-called breakaway rim, which yields to downward pressure and then snaps back to the horizontal, minimizing the potential for destruction. \u201cThe first one was an accident, but I wanted to see if I could do it again when I got back to Philadelphia,\u201d Dawkins recalled in the 2004 Times interview, referring to his most smashingly spectacular dunks. \u201cAll the fans were hollering, \u2018You\u2019ve got to do one for the home crowd,\u2019 so I went ahead and brought it down.", "answer": "2004", "sentence": "\u201cThe first one was an accident, but I wanted to see if I could do it again when I got back to Philadelphia,\u201d Dawkins recalled in the 2004 Times interview, referring to his most smashingly spectacular dunks.", "paragraph_sentence": "Not long after Dawkins\u2019s backboard-shattering spree, the league introduced the so-called breakaway rim, which yields to downward pressure and then snaps back to the horizontal, minimizing the potential for destruction. \u201cThe first one was an accident, but I wanted to see if I could do it again when I got back to Philadelphia,\u201d Dawkins recalled in the 2004 Times interview, referring to his most smashingly spectacular dunks. \u201cAll the fans were hollering, \u2018You\u2019ve got to do one for the home crowd,\u2019 so I went ahead and brought it down.", "paragraph_answer": "Not long after Dawkins\u2019s backboard-shattering spree, the league introduced the so-called breakaway rim, which yields to downward pressure and then snaps back to the horizontal, minimizing the potential for destruction. \u201cThe first one was an accident, but I wanted to see if I could do it again when I got back to Philadelphia,\u201d Dawkins recalled in the 2004 Times interview, referring to his most smashingly spectacular dunks. \u201cAll the fans were hollering, \u2018You\u2019ve got to do one for the home crowd,\u2019 so I went ahead and brought it down.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe first one was an accident, but I wanted to see if I could do it again when I got back to Philadelphia,\u201d Dawkins recalled in the 2004 Times interview, referring to his most smashingly spectacular dunks."} +{"question": "What upgrades were introduced in basketball?", "paragraph": "Not long after Dawkins\u2019s backboard-shattering spree, the league introduced the so-called breakaway rim, which yields to downward pressure and then snaps back to the horizontal, minimizing the potential for destruction. \u201cThe first one was an accident, but I wanted to see if I could do it again when I got back to Philadelphia,\u201d Dawkins recalled in the 2004 Times interview, referring to his most smashingly spectacular dunks. \u201cAll the fans were hollering, \u2018You\u2019ve got to do one for the home crowd,\u2019 so I went ahead and brought it down.", "answer": "the so-called breakaway rim, which yields to downward pressure and then snaps back to the horizontal, minimizing the potential for destruction.", "sentence": "Not long after Dawkins\u2019s backboard-shattering spree, the league introduced the so-called breakaway rim, which yields to downward pressure and then snaps back to the horizontal, minimizing the potential for destruction. \u201cThe first one was an accident, but I wanted to see if I could do it again when I got back to Philadelphia,\u201d Dawkins recalled in the 2004 Times interview, referring to his most smashingly spectacular dunks.", "paragraph_sentence": " Not long after Dawkins\u2019s backboard-shattering spree, the league introduced the so-called breakaway rim, which yields to downward pressure and then snaps back to the horizontal, minimizing the potential for destruction. \u201cThe first one was an accident, but I wanted to see if I could do it again when I got back to Philadelphia,\u201d Dawkins recalled in the 2004 Times interview, referring to his most smashingly spectacular dunks. \u201cAll the fans were hollering, \u2018You\u2019ve got to do one for the home crowd,\u2019 so I went ahead and brought it down.", "paragraph_answer": "Not long after Dawkins\u2019s backboard-shattering spree, the league introduced the so-called breakaway rim, which yields to downward pressure and then snaps back to the horizontal, minimizing the potential for destruction. \u201cThe first one was an accident, but I wanted to see if I could do it again when I got back to Philadelphia,\u201d Dawkins recalled in the 2004 Times interview, referring to his most smashingly spectacular dunks. \u201cAll the fans were hollering, \u2018You\u2019ve got to do one for the home crowd,\u2019 so I went ahead and brought it down.", "sentence_answer": "Not long after Dawkins\u2019s backboard-shattering spree, the league introduced the so-called breakaway rim, which yields to downward pressure and then snaps back to the horizontal, minimizing the potential for destruction. \u201cThe first one was an accident, but I wanted to see if I could do it again when I got back to Philadelphia,\u201d Dawkins recalled in the 2004 Times interview, referring to his most smashingly spectacular dunks."} +{"question": "Which network airs a TV show featuring the Notre Dame college football team?", "paragraph": "\u201cAt times it can be a little much, a little bit of a hassle,\u201d Prosise said. \u201cBut it\u2019s kind of cool to say you have your own TV show and you\u2019re part of a TV show.\u201d Showtime has shown Notre Dame in a positive light, though Kelly was not happy that it carried a teaser of him telling the team that tackle Ronnie Stanley was unable to accept being a captain. The scene was not included in the program, and Stanley later revealed that he could not accept because of parking violations. Stephen Espinoza, the executive vice president and general manager of Showtime sports and event programming, said the network had apologized. He also said that Showtime had worked with the university on story lines and on putting the show together and that it retained control over the program\u2019s content. The university is aware of what scenes Showtime plans to use but does not see the full program until it runs. Espinoza said the network also understood it was about student-athletes and did not want to embarrass anyone. Players had the option of signing releases and could ask not to be filmed. \u201cThis show can only be produced in collaboration,\u201d Espinoza said. Viewers have seen some lows, including the raw emotion of quarterback Malik Zaire after he broke his ankle, ending his season.", "answer": "Showtime", "sentence": "\u201cBut it\u2019s kind of cool to say you have your own TV show and you\u2019re part of a TV show.\u201d Showtime has shown Notre Dame in a positive light, though Kelly was not happy that it carried a teaser of him telling the team that tackle Ronnie Stanley was unable to accept being a captain.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cAt times it can be a little much, a little bit of a hassle,\u201d Prosise said. \u201cBut it\u2019s kind of cool to say you have your own TV show and you\u2019re part of a TV show.\u201d Showtime has shown Notre Dame in a positive light, though Kelly was not happy that it carried a teaser of him telling the team that tackle Ronnie Stanley was unable to accept being a captain. The scene was not included in the program, and Stanley later revealed that he could not accept because of parking violations. Stephen Espinoza, the executive vice president and general manager of Showtime sports and event programming, said the network had apologized. He also said that Showtime had worked with the university on story lines and on putting the show together and that it retained control over the program\u2019s content. The university is aware of what scenes Showtime plans to use but does not see the full program until it runs. Espinoza said the network also understood it was about student-athletes and did not want to embarrass anyone. Players had the option of signing releases and could ask not to be filmed. \u201cThis show can only be produced in collaboration,\u201d Espinoza said. Viewers have seen some lows, including the raw emotion of quarterback Malik Zaire after he broke his ankle, ending his season.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cAt times it can be a little much, a little bit of a hassle,\u201d Prosise said. \u201cBut it\u2019s kind of cool to say you have your own TV show and you\u2019re part of a TV show.\u201d Showtime has shown Notre Dame in a positive light, though Kelly was not happy that it carried a teaser of him telling the team that tackle Ronnie Stanley was unable to accept being a captain. The scene was not included in the program, and Stanley later revealed that he could not accept because of parking violations. Stephen Espinoza, the executive vice president and general manager of Showtime sports and event programming, said the network had apologized. He also said that Showtime had worked with the university on story lines and on putting the show together and that it retained control over the program\u2019s content. The university is aware of what scenes Showtime plans to use but does not see the full program until it runs. Espinoza said the network also understood it was about student-athletes and did not want to embarrass anyone. Players had the option of signing releases and could ask not to be filmed. \u201cThis show can only be produced in collaboration,\u201d Espinoza said. Viewers have seen some lows, including the raw emotion of quarterback Malik Zaire after he broke his ankle, ending his season.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cBut it\u2019s kind of cool to say you have your own TV show and you\u2019re part of a TV show.\u201d Showtime has shown Notre Dame in a positive light, though Kelly was not happy that it carried a teaser of him telling the team that tackle Ronnie Stanley was unable to accept being a captain."} +{"question": "Why couldn't Ronnie Stanley accept the captain position on the team?", "paragraph": "\u201cAt times it can be a little much, a little bit of a hassle,\u201d Prosise said. \u201cBut it\u2019s kind of cool to say you have your own TV show and you\u2019re part of a TV show.\u201d Showtime has shown Notre Dame in a positive light, though Kelly was not happy that it carried a teaser of him telling the team that tackle Ronnie Stanley was unable to accept being a captain. The scene was not included in the program, and Stanley later revealed that he could not accept because of parking violations. Stephen Espinoza, the executive vice president and general manager of Showtime sports and event programming, said the network had apologized. He also said that Showtime had worked with the university on story lines and on putting the show together and that it retained control over the program\u2019s content. The university is aware of what scenes Showtime plans to use but does not see the full program until it runs. Espinoza said the network also understood it was about student-athletes and did not want to embarrass anyone. Players had the option of signing releases and could ask not to be filmed. \u201cThis show can only be produced in collaboration,\u201d Espinoza said. Viewers have seen some lows, including the raw emotion of quarterback Malik Zaire after he broke his ankle, ending his season.", "answer": "parking violations", "sentence": "The scene was not included in the program, and Stanley later revealed that he could not accept because of parking violations .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cAt times it can be a little much, a little bit of a hassle,\u201d Prosise said. \u201cBut it\u2019s kind of cool to say you have your own TV show and you\u2019re part of a TV show.\u201d Showtime has shown Notre Dame in a positive light, though Kelly was not happy that it carried a teaser of him telling the team that tackle Ronnie Stanley was unable to accept being a captain. The scene was not included in the program, and Stanley later revealed that he could not accept because of parking violations . Stephen Espinoza, the executive vice president and general manager of Showtime sports and event programming, said the network had apologized. He also said that Showtime had worked with the university on story lines and on putting the show together and that it retained control over the program\u2019s content. The university is aware of what scenes Showtime plans to use but does not see the full program until it runs. Espinoza said the network also understood it was about student-athletes and did not want to embarrass anyone. Players had the option of signing releases and could ask not to be filmed. \u201cThis show can only be produced in collaboration,\u201d Espinoza said. Viewers have seen some lows, including the raw emotion of quarterback Malik Zaire after he broke his ankle, ending his season.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cAt times it can be a little much, a little bit of a hassle,\u201d Prosise said. \u201cBut it\u2019s kind of cool to say you have your own TV show and you\u2019re part of a TV show.\u201d Showtime has shown Notre Dame in a positive light, though Kelly was not happy that it carried a teaser of him telling the team that tackle Ronnie Stanley was unable to accept being a captain. The scene was not included in the program, and Stanley later revealed that he could not accept because of parking violations . Stephen Espinoza, the executive vice president and general manager of Showtime sports and event programming, said the network had apologized. He also said that Showtime had worked with the university on story lines and on putting the show together and that it retained control over the program\u2019s content. The university is aware of what scenes Showtime plans to use but does not see the full program until it runs. Espinoza said the network also understood it was about student-athletes and did not want to embarrass anyone. Players had the option of signing releases and could ask not to be filmed. \u201cThis show can only be produced in collaboration,\u201d Espinoza said. Viewers have seen some lows, including the raw emotion of quarterback Malik Zaire after he broke his ankle, ending his season.", "sentence_answer": "The scene was not included in the program, and Stanley later revealed that he could not accept because of parking violations ."} +{"question": "Who maintained some control over the content of the show alongside Espinoza?", "paragraph": "\u201cAt times it can be a little much, a little bit of a hassle,\u201d Prosise said. \u201cBut it\u2019s kind of cool to say you have your own TV show and you\u2019re part of a TV show.\u201d Showtime has shown Notre Dame in a positive light, though Kelly was not happy that it carried a teaser of him telling the team that tackle Ronnie Stanley was unable to accept being a captain. The scene was not included in the program, and Stanley later revealed that he could not accept because of parking violations. Stephen Espinoza, the executive vice president and general manager of Showtime sports and event programming, said the network had apologized. He also said that Showtime had worked with the university on story lines and on putting the show together and that it retained control over the program\u2019s content. The university is aware of what scenes Showtime plans to use but does not see the full program until it runs. Espinoza said the network also understood it was about student-athletes and did not want to embarrass anyone. Players had the option of signing releases and could ask not to be filmed. \u201cThis show can only be produced in collaboration,\u201d Espinoza said. Viewers have seen some lows, including the raw emotion of quarterback Malik Zaire after he broke his ankle, ending his season.", "answer": "the university", "sentence": "He also said that Showtime had worked with the university on story lines and on putting the show together and that it retained control over the program\u2019s content.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cAt times it can be a little much, a little bit of a hassle,\u201d Prosise said. \u201cBut it\u2019s kind of cool to say you have your own TV show and you\u2019re part of a TV show.\u201d Showtime has shown Notre Dame in a positive light, though Kelly was not happy that it carried a teaser of him telling the team that tackle Ronnie Stanley was unable to accept being a captain. The scene was not included in the program, and Stanley later revealed that he could not accept because of parking violations. Stephen Espinoza, the executive vice president and general manager of Showtime sports and event programming, said the network had apologized. He also said that Showtime had worked with the university on story lines and on putting the show together and that it retained control over the program\u2019s content. The university is aware of what scenes Showtime plans to use but does not see the full program until it runs. Espinoza said the network also understood it was about student-athletes and did not want to embarrass anyone. Players had the option of signing releases and could ask not to be filmed. \u201cThis show can only be produced in collaboration,\u201d Espinoza said. Viewers have seen some lows, including the raw emotion of quarterback Malik Zaire after he broke his ankle, ending his season.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cAt times it can be a little much, a little bit of a hassle,\u201d Prosise said. \u201cBut it\u2019s kind of cool to say you have your own TV show and you\u2019re part of a TV show.\u201d Showtime has shown Notre Dame in a positive light, though Kelly was not happy that it carried a teaser of him telling the team that tackle Ronnie Stanley was unable to accept being a captain. The scene was not included in the program, and Stanley later revealed that he could not accept because of parking violations. Stephen Espinoza, the executive vice president and general manager of Showtime sports and event programming, said the network had apologized. He also said that Showtime had worked with the university on story lines and on putting the show together and that it retained control over the program\u2019s content. The university is aware of what scenes Showtime plans to use but does not see the full program until it runs. Espinoza said the network also understood it was about student-athletes and did not want to embarrass anyone. Players had the option of signing releases and could ask not to be filmed. \u201cThis show can only be produced in collaboration,\u201d Espinoza said. Viewers have seen some lows, including the raw emotion of quarterback Malik Zaire after he broke his ankle, ending his season.", "sentence_answer": "He also said that Showtime had worked with the university on story lines and on putting the show together and that it retained control over the program\u2019s content."} +{"question": "What happened to Malik Zaire to end his season?", "paragraph": "\u201cAt times it can be a little much, a little bit of a hassle,\u201d Prosise said. \u201cBut it\u2019s kind of cool to say you have your own TV show and you\u2019re part of a TV show.\u201d Showtime has shown Notre Dame in a positive light, though Kelly was not happy that it carried a teaser of him telling the team that tackle Ronnie Stanley was unable to accept being a captain. The scene was not included in the program, and Stanley later revealed that he could not accept because of parking violations. Stephen Espinoza, the executive vice president and general manager of Showtime sports and event programming, said the network had apologized. He also said that Showtime had worked with the university on story lines and on putting the show together and that it retained control over the program\u2019s content. The university is aware of what scenes Showtime plans to use but does not see the full program until it runs. Espinoza said the network also understood it was about student-athletes and did not want to embarrass anyone. Players had the option of signing releases and could ask not to be filmed. \u201cThis show can only be produced in collaboration,\u201d Espinoza said. Viewers have seen some lows, including the raw emotion of quarterback Malik Zaire after he broke his ankle, ending his season.", "answer": "broke his ankle", "sentence": "Viewers have seen some lows, including the raw emotion of quarterback Malik Zaire after he broke his ankle , ending his season.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cAt times it can be a little much, a little bit of a hassle,\u201d Prosise said. \u201cBut it\u2019s kind of cool to say you have your own TV show and you\u2019re part of a TV show.\u201d Showtime has shown Notre Dame in a positive light, though Kelly was not happy that it carried a teaser of him telling the team that tackle Ronnie Stanley was unable to accept being a captain. The scene was not included in the program, and Stanley later revealed that he could not accept because of parking violations. Stephen Espinoza, the executive vice president and general manager of Showtime sports and event programming, said the network had apologized. He also said that Showtime had worked with the university on story lines and on putting the show together and that it retained control over the program\u2019s content. The university is aware of what scenes Showtime plans to use but does not see the full program until it runs. Espinoza said the network also understood it was about student-athletes and did not want to embarrass anyone. Players had the option of signing releases and could ask not to be filmed. \u201cThis show can only be produced in collaboration,\u201d Espinoza said. Viewers have seen some lows, including the raw emotion of quarterback Malik Zaire after he broke his ankle , ending his season. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cAt times it can be a little much, a little bit of a hassle,\u201d Prosise said. \u201cBut it\u2019s kind of cool to say you have your own TV show and you\u2019re part of a TV show.\u201d Showtime has shown Notre Dame in a positive light, though Kelly was not happy that it carried a teaser of him telling the team that tackle Ronnie Stanley was unable to accept being a captain. The scene was not included in the program, and Stanley later revealed that he could not accept because of parking violations. Stephen Espinoza, the executive vice president and general manager of Showtime sports and event programming, said the network had apologized. He also said that Showtime had worked with the university on story lines and on putting the show together and that it retained control over the program\u2019s content. The university is aware of what scenes Showtime plans to use but does not see the full program until it runs. Espinoza said the network also understood it was about student-athletes and did not want to embarrass anyone. Players had the option of signing releases and could ask not to be filmed. \u201cThis show can only be produced in collaboration,\u201d Espinoza said. Viewers have seen some lows, including the raw emotion of quarterback Malik Zaire after he broke his ankle , ending his season.", "sentence_answer": "Viewers have seen some lows, including the raw emotion of quarterback Malik Zaire after he broke his ankle , ending his season."} +{"question": "What demographic did the show focus on?", "paragraph": "\u201cAt times it can be a little much, a little bit of a hassle,\u201d Prosise said. \u201cBut it\u2019s kind of cool to say you have your own TV show and you\u2019re part of a TV show.\u201d Showtime has shown Notre Dame in a positive light, though Kelly was not happy that it carried a teaser of him telling the team that tackle Ronnie Stanley was unable to accept being a captain. The scene was not included in the program, and Stanley later revealed that he could not accept because of parking violations. Stephen Espinoza, the executive vice president and general manager of Showtime sports and event programming, said the network had apologized. He also said that Showtime had worked with the university on story lines and on putting the show together and that it retained control over the program\u2019s content. The university is aware of what scenes Showtime plans to use but does not see the full program until it runs. Espinoza said the network also understood it was about student-athletes and did not want to embarrass anyone. Players had the option of signing releases and could ask not to be filmed. \u201cThis show can only be produced in collaboration,\u201d Espinoza said. Viewers have seen some lows, including the raw emotion of quarterback Malik Zaire after he broke his ankle, ending his season.", "answer": "student-athletes", "sentence": "Espinoza said the network also understood it was about student-athletes and did not want to embarrass anyone.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cAt times it can be a little much, a little bit of a hassle,\u201d Prosise said. \u201cBut it\u2019s kind of cool to say you have your own TV show and you\u2019re part of a TV show.\u201d Showtime has shown Notre Dame in a positive light, though Kelly was not happy that it carried a teaser of him telling the team that tackle Ronnie Stanley was unable to accept being a captain. The scene was not included in the program, and Stanley later revealed that he could not accept because of parking violations. Stephen Espinoza, the executive vice president and general manager of Showtime sports and event programming, said the network had apologized. He also said that Showtime had worked with the university on story lines and on putting the show together and that it retained control over the program\u2019s content. The university is aware of what scenes Showtime plans to use but does not see the full program until it runs. Espinoza said the network also understood it was about student-athletes and did not want to embarrass anyone. Players had the option of signing releases and could ask not to be filmed. \u201cThis show can only be produced in collaboration,\u201d Espinoza said. Viewers have seen some lows, including the raw emotion of quarterback Malik Zaire after he broke his ankle, ending his season.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cAt times it can be a little much, a little bit of a hassle,\u201d Prosise said. \u201cBut it\u2019s kind of cool to say you have your own TV show and you\u2019re part of a TV show.\u201d Showtime has shown Notre Dame in a positive light, though Kelly was not happy that it carried a teaser of him telling the team that tackle Ronnie Stanley was unable to accept being a captain. The scene was not included in the program, and Stanley later revealed that he could not accept because of parking violations. Stephen Espinoza, the executive vice president and general manager of Showtime sports and event programming, said the network had apologized. He also said that Showtime had worked with the university on story lines and on putting the show together and that it retained control over the program\u2019s content. The university is aware of what scenes Showtime plans to use but does not see the full program until it runs. Espinoza said the network also understood it was about student-athletes and did not want to embarrass anyone. Players had the option of signing releases and could ask not to be filmed. \u201cThis show can only be produced in collaboration,\u201d Espinoza said. Viewers have seen some lows, including the raw emotion of quarterback Malik Zaire after he broke his ankle, ending his season.", "sentence_answer": "Espinoza said the network also understood it was about student-athletes and did not want to embarrass anyone."} +{"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."} +{"question": "Who coached a women's flag football team in an episode of the show?", "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": "Cole Luke", "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."} +{"question": "How long is each episode?", "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": "30-minute show", "sentence": "Espinoza said the network was pleased with the weekly 30-minute show .", "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": "Espinoza said the network was pleased with the weekly 30-minute show ."} +{"question": "What was the average viewership for the first few episodes?", "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": "663,000 viewers", "sentence": "The first three episodes averaged 663,000 viewers across all platforms.", "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": "The first three episodes averaged 663,000 viewers across all platforms."} +{"question": "What is the first most-watched sports series on Showtime?", "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": "Inside the NFL", "sentence": "That compares favorably with Showtime\u2019s most popular sports series, \u201c Inside the NFL ,\u201d and the show is the third-most-watched program through its streaming service, Espinoza said.", "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, \u201c Inside 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, \u201c Inside the NFL ,\u201d and the show is the third-most-watched program through its streaming service, Espinoza said.", "sentence_answer": "That compares favorably with Showtime\u2019s most popular sports series, \u201c Inside the NFL ,\u201d and the show is the third-most-watched program through its streaming service, Espinoza said."} +{"question": "What time span did uber and Lyft take to insert shared rides in 6 major USA cities?", "paragraph": "In the last 15 months, Uber and Lyft have introduced shared rides in Austin, Boston, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington through UberPool and Lyft Line. Cars or vans sporting names like Split (sections of Washington only) Via (sections of Manhattan only) Bridj (rush hours in Boston and Washington) and Carma, which also runs in Chicago, Houston, San Diego and Seattle, also compete. Some ride-sharing apps are available internationally as well. \u201cThey\u2019re very specific to niche transportation needs,\u201d said Tony Dutzik, a senior policy analyst at the Frontier Group, a research company in Boston.", "answer": "15 months", "sentence": "In the last 15 months , Uber and Lyft have introduced shared rides in Austin, Boston, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington through UberPool and Lyft Line.", "paragraph_sentence": " In the last 15 months , Uber and Lyft have introduced shared rides in Austin, Boston, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington through UberPool and Lyft Line. Cars or vans sporting names like Split (sections of Washington only) Via (sections of Manhattan only) Bridj (rush hours in Boston and Washington) and Carma, which also runs in Chicago, Houston, San Diego and Seattle, also compete. Some ride-sharing apps are available internationally as well. \u201cThey\u2019re very specific to niche transportation needs,\u201d said Tony Dutzik, a senior policy analyst at the Frontier Group, a research company in Boston.", "paragraph_answer": "In the last 15 months , Uber and Lyft have introduced shared rides in Austin, Boston, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington through UberPool and Lyft Line. Cars or vans sporting names like Split (sections of Washington only) Via (sections of Manhattan only) Bridj (rush hours in Boston and Washington) and Carma, which also runs in Chicago, Houston, San Diego and Seattle, also compete. Some ride-sharing apps are available internationally as well. \u201cThey\u2019re very specific to niche transportation needs,\u201d said Tony Dutzik, a senior policy analyst at the Frontier Group, a research company in Boston.", "sentence_answer": "In the last 15 months , Uber and Lyft have introduced shared rides in Austin, Boston, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington through UberPool and Lyft Line."} +{"question": "What name did Uber give to their ride shares?", "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": "UberPool", "sentence": "In the last 15 months, Uber and Lyft have introduced shared rides in Austin, Boston, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington through UberPool and Lyft Line.", "paragraph_sentence": " In the last 15 months, Uber and Lyft have introduced shared rides in Austin, Boston, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington through UberPool and Lyft Line. Cars or vans sporting names like Split (sections of Washington only) Via (sections of Manhattan only) Bridj (rush hours in Boston and Washington) and Carma, which also runs in Chicago, Houston, San Diego and Seattle, also compete. Some ride-sharing apps are available internationally as well. \u201cThey\u2019re very specific to niche transportation needs,\u201d said Tony Dutzik, a senior policy analyst at the Frontier Group, a research company in Boston.", "paragraph_answer": "In the last 15 months, Uber and Lyft have introduced shared rides in Austin, Boston, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington through UberPool and Lyft Line. Cars or vans sporting names like Split (sections of Washington only) Via (sections of Manhattan only) Bridj (rush hours in Boston and Washington) and Carma, which also runs in Chicago, Houston, San Diego and Seattle, also compete. Some ride-sharing apps are available internationally as well. \u201cThey\u2019re very specific to niche transportation needs,\u201d said Tony Dutzik, a senior policy analyst at the Frontier Group, a research company in Boston.", "sentence_answer": "In the last 15 months, Uber and Lyft have introduced shared rides in Austin, Boston, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington through UberPool and Lyft Line."} +{"question": "What name did Lyft give to their ride shares?", "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": "Lyft Line", "sentence": "In the last 15 months, Uber and Lyft have introduced shared rides in Austin, Boston, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington through UberPool and Lyft Line .", "paragraph_sentence": " In the last 15 months, Uber and Lyft have introduced shared rides in Austin, Boston, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington through UberPool and Lyft Line . Cars or vans sporting names like Split (sections of Washington only) Via (sections of Manhattan only) Bridj (rush hours in Boston and Washington) and Carma, which also runs in Chicago, Houston, San Diego and Seattle, also compete. Some ride-sharing apps are available internationally as well. \u201cThey\u2019re very specific to niche transportation needs,\u201d said Tony Dutzik, a senior policy analyst at the Frontier Group, a research company in Boston.", "paragraph_answer": "In the last 15 months, Uber and Lyft have introduced shared rides in Austin, Boston, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington through UberPool and Lyft Line . Cars or vans sporting names like Split (sections of Washington only) Via (sections of Manhattan only) Bridj (rush hours in Boston and Washington) and Carma, which also runs in Chicago, Houston, San Diego and Seattle, also compete. Some ride-sharing apps are available internationally as well. \u201cThey\u2019re very specific to niche transportation needs,\u201d said Tony Dutzik, a senior policy analyst at the Frontier Group, a research company in Boston.", "sentence_answer": "In the last 15 months, Uber and Lyft have introduced shared rides in Austin, Boston, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington through UberPool and Lyft Line ."} +{"question": "What is the name of a competitor of UberPool and Lyft Line?", "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": "Carma", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"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. "} +{"question": "What percentage of workers drove alone in 2013?", "paragraph": "The new services come after a long decline of car-pooling. According to a report released by the Census Bureau in August, car-pooling fell to a low of just over 9 percent in 2013, the last year for which figures are available, from nearly 20 percent in 1980. About 76 percent of people who traveled to work drove alone in 2013, according to the report. Christopher Koopman, a research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, gained firsthand experience in the sharing economy. After landing at Reagan National Airport in Washington, he considered the traditional options: taking a taxi or riding on mass transit. In the end, he used UberPool, a recent venture by Uber that offers shared rides on demand. Although the trip to his office took a detour to a hotel to drop off his traveling companion, the price of the ride fell to $8, from $12 if he had ridden solo.", "answer": "76 percent", "sentence": "About 76 percent of people who traveled to work drove alone in 2013, according to the report.", "paragraph_sentence": "The new services come after a long decline of car-pooling. According to a report released by the Census Bureau in August, car-pooling fell to a low of just over 9 percent in 2013, the last year for which figures are available, from nearly 20 percent in 1980. About 76 percent of people who traveled to work drove alone in 2013, according to the report. Christopher Koopman, a research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, gained firsthand experience in the sharing economy. After landing at Reagan National Airport in Washington, he considered the traditional options: taking a taxi or riding on mass transit. In the end, he used UberPool, a recent venture by Uber that offers shared rides on demand. Although the trip to his office took a detour to a hotel to drop off his traveling companion, the price of the ride fell to $8, from $12 if he had ridden solo.", "paragraph_answer": "The new services come after a long decline of car-pooling. According to a report released by the Census Bureau in August, car-pooling fell to a low of just over 9 percent in 2013, the last year for which figures are available, from nearly 20 percent in 1980. About 76 percent of people who traveled to work drove alone in 2013, according to the report. Christopher Koopman, a research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, gained firsthand experience in the sharing economy. After landing at Reagan National Airport in Washington, he considered the traditional options: taking a taxi or riding on mass transit. In the end, he used UberPool, a recent venture by Uber that offers shared rides on demand. Although the trip to his office took a detour to a hotel to drop off his traveling companion, the price of the ride fell to $8, from $12 if he had ridden solo.", "sentence_answer": "About 76 percent of people who traveled to work drove alone in 2013, according to the report."} +{"question": "Who released a report saying car-polling was just over 9% in 2013?", "paragraph": "The new services come after a long decline of car-pooling. According to a report released by the Census Bureau in August, car-pooling fell to a low of just over 9 percent in 2013, the last year for which figures are available, from nearly 20 percent in 1980. About 76 percent of people who traveled to work drove alone in 2013, according to the report. Christopher Koopman, a research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, gained firsthand experience in the sharing economy. After landing at Reagan National Airport in Washington, he considered the traditional options: taking a taxi or riding on mass transit. In the end, he used UberPool, a recent venture by Uber that offers shared rides on demand. Although the trip to his office took a detour to a hotel to drop off his traveling companion, the price of the ride fell to $8, from $12 if he had ridden solo.", "answer": "the Census Bureau", "sentence": "According to a report released by the Census Bureau in August, car-pooling fell to a low of just over 9 percent in 2013, the last year for which figures are available, from nearly 20 percent in 1980.", "paragraph_sentence": "The new services come after a long decline of car-pooling. According to a report released by the Census Bureau in August, car-pooling fell to a low of just over 9 percent in 2013, the last year for which figures are available, from nearly 20 percent in 1980. About 76 percent of people who traveled to work drove alone in 2013, according to the report. Christopher Koopman, a research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, gained firsthand experience in the sharing economy. After landing at Reagan National Airport in Washington, he considered the traditional options: taking a taxi or riding on mass transit. In the end, he used UberPool, a recent venture by Uber that offers shared rides on demand. Although the trip to his office took a detour to a hotel to drop off his traveling companion, the price of the ride fell to $8, from $12 if he had ridden solo.", "paragraph_answer": "The new services come after a long decline of car-pooling. According to a report released by the Census Bureau in August, car-pooling fell to a low of just over 9 percent in 2013, the last year for which figures are available, from nearly 20 percent in 1980. About 76 percent of people who traveled to work drove alone in 2013, according to the report. Christopher Koopman, a research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, gained firsthand experience in the sharing economy. After landing at Reagan National Airport in Washington, he considered the traditional options: taking a taxi or riding on mass transit. In the end, he used UberPool, a recent venture by Uber that offers shared rides on demand. Although the trip to his office took a detour to a hotel to drop off his traveling companion, the price of the ride fell to $8, from $12 if he had ridden solo.", "sentence_answer": "According to a report released by the Census Bureau in August, car-pooling fell to a low of just over 9 percent in 2013, the last year for which figures are available, from nearly 20 percent in 1980."} +{"question": "What percentage of people car-pooled in 1980?", "paragraph": "The new services come after a long decline of car-pooling. According to a report released by the Census Bureau in August, car-pooling fell to a low of just over 9 percent in 2013, the last year for which figures are available, from nearly 20 percent in 1980. About 76 percent of people who traveled to work drove alone in 2013, according to the report. Christopher Koopman, a research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, gained firsthand experience in the sharing economy. After landing at Reagan National Airport in Washington, he considered the traditional options: taking a taxi or riding on mass transit. In the end, he used UberPool, a recent venture by Uber that offers shared rides on demand. Although the trip to his office took a detour to a hotel to drop off his traveling companion, the price of the ride fell to $8, from $12 if he had ridden solo.", "answer": "20 percent", "sentence": "According to a report released by the Census Bureau in August, car-pooling fell to a low of just over 9 percent in 2013, the last year for which figures are available, from nearly 20 percent in 1980.", "paragraph_sentence": "The new services come after a long decline of car-pooling. According to a report released by the Census Bureau in August, car-pooling fell to a low of just over 9 percent in 2013, the last year for which figures are available, from nearly 20 percent in 1980. About 76 percent of people who traveled to work drove alone in 2013, according to the report. Christopher Koopman, a research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, gained firsthand experience in the sharing economy. After landing at Reagan National Airport in Washington, he considered the traditional options: taking a taxi or riding on mass transit. In the end, he used UberPool, a recent venture by Uber that offers shared rides on demand. Although the trip to his office took a detour to a hotel to drop off his traveling companion, the price of the ride fell to $8, from $12 if he had ridden solo.", "paragraph_answer": "The new services come after a long decline of car-pooling. According to a report released by the Census Bureau in August, car-pooling fell to a low of just over 9 percent in 2013, the last year for which figures are available, from nearly 20 percent in 1980. About 76 percent of people who traveled to work drove alone in 2013, according to the report. Christopher Koopman, a research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, gained firsthand experience in the sharing economy. After landing at Reagan National Airport in Washington, he considered the traditional options: taking a taxi or riding on mass transit. In the end, he used UberPool, a recent venture by Uber that offers shared rides on demand. Although the trip to his office took a detour to a hotel to drop off his traveling companion, the price of the ride fell to $8, from $12 if he had ridden solo.", "sentence_answer": "According to a report released by the Census Bureau in August, car-pooling fell to a low of just over 9 percent in 2013, the last year for which figures are available, from nearly 20 percent in 1980."} +{"question": "What would be a good summary of what happened with car-pooling from 1980 to 2013?", "paragraph": "The new services come after a long decline of car-pooling. According to a report released by the Census Bureau in August, car-pooling fell to a low of just over 9 percent in 2013, the last year for which figures are available, from nearly 20 percent in 1980. About 76 percent of people who traveled to work drove alone in 2013, according to the report. Christopher Koopman, a research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, gained firsthand experience in the sharing economy. After landing at Reagan National Airport in Washington, he considered the traditional options: taking a taxi or riding on mass transit. In the end, he used UberPool, a recent venture by Uber that offers shared rides on demand. Although the trip to his office took a detour to a hotel to drop off his traveling companion, the price of the ride fell to $8, from $12 if he had ridden solo.", "answer": "a long decline of car-pooling", "sentence": "The new services come after a long decline of car-pooling .", "paragraph_sentence": " The new services come after a long decline of car-pooling . According to a report released by the Census Bureau in August, car-pooling fell to a low of just over 9 percent in 2013, the last year for which figures are available, from nearly 20 percent in 1980. About 76 percent of people who traveled to work drove alone in 2013, according to the report. Christopher Koopman, a research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, gained firsthand experience in the sharing economy. After landing at Reagan National Airport in Washington, he considered the traditional options: taking a taxi or riding on mass transit. In the end, he used UberPool, a recent venture by Uber that offers shared rides on demand. Although the trip to his office took a detour to a hotel to drop off his traveling companion, the price of the ride fell to $8, from $12 if he had ridden solo.", "paragraph_answer": "The new services come after a long decline of car-pooling . According to a report released by the Census Bureau in August, car-pooling fell to a low of just over 9 percent in 2013, the last year for which figures are available, from nearly 20 percent in 1980. About 76 percent of people who traveled to work drove alone in 2013, according to the report. Christopher Koopman, a research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, gained firsthand experience in the sharing economy. After landing at Reagan National Airport in Washington, he considered the traditional options: taking a taxi or riding on mass transit. In the end, he used UberPool, a recent venture by Uber that offers shared rides on demand. Although the trip to his office took a detour to a hotel to drop off his traveling companion, the price of the ride fell to $8, from $12 if he had ridden solo.", "sentence_answer": "The new services come after a long decline of car-pooling ."} +{"question": "Who was Christopher Koopman?", "paragraph": "The new services come after a long decline of car-pooling. According to a report released by the Census Bureau in August, car-pooling fell to a low of just over 9 percent in 2013, the last year for which figures are available, from nearly 20 percent in 1980. About 76 percent of people who traveled to work drove alone in 2013, according to the report. Christopher Koopman, a research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, gained firsthand experience in the sharing economy. After landing at Reagan National Airport in Washington, he considered the traditional options: taking a taxi or riding on mass transit. In the end, he used UberPool, a recent venture by Uber that offers shared rides on demand. Although the trip to his office took a detour to a hotel to drop off his traveling companion, the price of the ride fell to $8, from $12 if he had ridden solo.", "answer": "a research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University", "sentence": "Christopher Koopman, a research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University , gained firsthand experience in the sharing economy.", "paragraph_sentence": "The new services come after a long decline of car-pooling. According to a report released by the Census Bureau in August, car-pooling fell to a low of just over 9 percent in 2013, the last year for which figures are available, from nearly 20 percent in 1980. About 76 percent of people who traveled to work drove alone in 2013, according to the report. Christopher Koopman, a research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University , gained firsthand experience in the sharing economy. After landing at Reagan National Airport in Washington, he considered the traditional options: taking a taxi or riding on mass transit. In the end, he used UberPool, a recent venture by Uber that offers shared rides on demand. Although the trip to his office took a detour to a hotel to drop off his traveling companion, the price of the ride fell to $8, from $12 if he had ridden solo.", "paragraph_answer": "The new services come after a long decline of car-pooling. According to a report released by the Census Bureau in August, car-pooling fell to a low of just over 9 percent in 2013, the last year for which figures are available, from nearly 20 percent in 1980. About 76 percent of people who traveled to work drove alone in 2013, according to the report. Christopher Koopman, a research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University , gained firsthand experience in the sharing economy. After landing at Reagan National Airport in Washington, he considered the traditional options: taking a taxi or riding on mass transit. In the end, he used UberPool, a recent venture by Uber that offers shared rides on demand. Although the trip to his office took a detour to a hotel to drop off his traveling companion, the price of the ride fell to $8, from $12 if he had ridden solo.", "sentence_answer": "Christopher Koopman, a research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University , gained firsthand experience in the sharing economy."} +{"question": "What company intended to serve Kansas City at the beginning of the new year?", "paragraph": "Whether car-pooling will expand to other cities is unclear. \u201cThere are only a handful of cities where people live and work along densely populated corridors,\u201d Mr. Schwieterman said. Bridj, however, said it had plans to enter Kansas City early next year in a partnership with the city. Others have doubts about an expansion as well. \u201cEmployment clusters are less geographically concentrated than they once were, so people who live near one another are less likely to be headed in the same direction,\u201d Brian McKenzie, the author of the Census Bureau report, wrote in an email. Still, smartphones have presented a more efficient way to organize commuters based on where they live and work.", "answer": "Bridj", "sentence": "Bridj , however, said it had plans to enter Kansas City early next year in a partnership with the city.", "paragraph_sentence": "Whether car-pooling will expand to other cities is unclear. \u201cThere are only a handful of cities where people live and work along densely populated corridors,\u201d Mr. Schwieterman said. Bridj , however, said it had plans to enter Kansas City early next year in a partnership with the city. Others have doubts about an expansion as well. \u201cEmployment clusters are less geographically concentrated than they once were, so people who live near one another are less likely to be headed in the same direction,\u201d Brian McKenzie, the author of the Census Bureau report, wrote in an email. Still, smartphones have presented a more efficient way to organize commuters based on where they live and work.", "paragraph_answer": "Whether car-pooling will expand to other cities is unclear. \u201cThere are only a handful of cities where people live and work along densely populated corridors,\u201d Mr. Schwieterman said. Bridj , however, said it had plans to enter Kansas City early next year in a partnership with the city. Others have doubts about an expansion as well. \u201cEmployment clusters are less geographically concentrated than they once were, so people who live near one another are less likely to be headed in the same direction,\u201d Brian McKenzie, the author of the Census Bureau report, wrote in an email. Still, smartphones have presented a more efficient way to organize commuters based on where they live and work.", "sentence_answer": " Bridj , however, said it had plans to enter Kansas City early next year in a partnership with the city."} +{"question": "Who was the author of the Census Bureau Report?", "paragraph": "Whether car-pooling will expand to other cities is unclear. \u201cThere are only a handful of cities where people live and work along densely populated corridors,\u201d Mr. Schwieterman said. Bridj, however, said it had plans to enter Kansas City early next year in a partnership with the city. Others have doubts about an expansion as well. \u201cEmployment clusters are less geographically concentrated than they once were, so people who live near one another are less likely to be headed in the same direction,\u201d Brian McKenzie, the author of the Census Bureau report, wrote in an email. Still, smartphones have presented a more efficient way to organize commuters based on where they live and work.", "answer": "Brian McKenzie", "sentence": "\u201cEmployment clusters are less geographically concentrated than they once were, so people who live near one another are less likely to be headed in the same direction,\u201d Brian McKenzie , the author of the Census Bureau report, wrote in an email.", "paragraph_sentence": "Whether car-pooling will expand to other cities is unclear. \u201cThere are only a handful of cities where people live and work along densely populated corridors,\u201d Mr. Schwieterman said. Bridj, however, said it had plans to enter Kansas City early next year in a partnership with the city. Others have doubts about an expansion as well. \u201cEmployment clusters are less geographically concentrated than they once were, so people who live near one another are less likely to be headed in the same direction,\u201d Brian McKenzie , the author of the Census Bureau report, wrote in an email. Still, smartphones have presented a more efficient way to organize commuters based on where they live and work.", "paragraph_answer": "Whether car-pooling will expand to other cities is unclear. \u201cThere are only a handful of cities where people live and work along densely populated corridors,\u201d Mr. Schwieterman said. Bridj, however, said it had plans to enter Kansas City early next year in a partnership with the city. Others have doubts about an expansion as well. \u201cEmployment clusters are less geographically concentrated than they once were, so people who live near one another are less likely to be headed in the same direction,\u201d Brian McKenzie , the author of the Census Bureau report, wrote in an email. Still, smartphones have presented a more efficient way to organize commuters based on where they live and work.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cEmployment clusters are less geographically concentrated than they once were, so people who live near one another are less likely to be headed in the same direction,\u201d Brian McKenzie , the author of the Census Bureau report, wrote in an email."} +{"question": "How did Brian McKenzie write about the less than admirable work locations for ride-sharing?", "paragraph": "Whether car-pooling will expand to other cities is unclear. \u201cThere are only a handful of cities where people live and work along densely populated corridors,\u201d Mr. Schwieterman said. Bridj, however, said it had plans to enter Kansas City early next year in a partnership with the city. Others have doubts about an expansion as well. \u201cEmployment clusters are less geographically concentrated than they once were, so people who live near one another are less likely to be headed in the same direction,\u201d Brian McKenzie, the author of the Census Bureau report, wrote in an email. Still, smartphones have presented a more efficient way to organize commuters based on where they live and work.", "answer": "email", "sentence": "\u201cEmployment clusters are less geographically concentrated than they once were, so people who live near one another are less likely to be headed in the same direction,\u201d Brian McKenzie, the author of the Census Bureau report, wrote in an email .", "paragraph_sentence": "Whether car-pooling will expand to other cities is unclear. \u201cThere are only a handful of cities where people live and work along densely populated corridors,\u201d Mr. Schwieterman said. Bridj, however, said it had plans to enter Kansas City early next year in a partnership with the city. Others have doubts about an expansion as well. \u201cEmployment clusters are less geographically concentrated than they once were, so people who live near one another are less likely to be headed in the same direction,\u201d Brian McKenzie, the author of the Census Bureau report, wrote in an email . Still, smartphones have presented a more efficient way to organize commuters based on where they live and work.", "paragraph_answer": "Whether car-pooling will expand to other cities is unclear. \u201cThere are only a handful of cities where people live and work along densely populated corridors,\u201d Mr. Schwieterman said. Bridj, however, said it had plans to enter Kansas City early next year in a partnership with the city. Others have doubts about an expansion as well. \u201cEmployment clusters are less geographically concentrated than they once were, so people who live near one another are less likely to be headed in the same direction,\u201d Brian McKenzie, the author of the Census Bureau report, wrote in an email . Still, smartphones have presented a more efficient way to organize commuters based on where they live and work.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cEmployment clusters are less geographically concentrated than they once were, so people who live near one another are less likely to be headed in the same direction,\u201d Brian McKenzie, the author of the Census Bureau report, wrote in an email ."} +{"question": "Who doubted the expansion of car-pooling?", "paragraph": "Whether car-pooling will expand to other cities is unclear. \u201cThere are only a handful of cities where people live and work along densely populated corridors,\u201d Mr. Schwieterman said. Bridj, however, said it had plans to enter Kansas City early next year in a partnership with the city. Others have doubts about an expansion as well. \u201cEmployment clusters are less geographically concentrated than they once were, so people who live near one another are less likely to be headed in the same direction,\u201d Brian McKenzie, the author of the Census Bureau report, wrote in an email. Still, smartphones have presented a more efficient way to organize commuters based on where they live and work.", "answer": "Mr. Schwieterman", "sentence": "\u201cThere are only a handful of cities where people live and work along densely populated corridors,\u201d Mr. Schwieterman said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Whether car-pooling will expand to other cities is unclear. \u201cThere are only a handful of cities where people live and work along densely populated corridors,\u201d Mr. Schwieterman said. Bridj, however, said it had plans to enter Kansas City early next year in a partnership with the city. Others have doubts about an expansion as well. \u201cEmployment clusters are less geographically concentrated than they once were, so people who live near one another are less likely to be headed in the same direction,\u201d Brian McKenzie, the author of the Census Bureau report, wrote in an email. Still, smartphones have presented a more efficient way to organize commuters based on where they live and work.", "paragraph_answer": "Whether car-pooling will expand to other cities is unclear. \u201cThere are only a handful of cities where people live and work along densely populated corridors,\u201d Mr. Schwieterman said. Bridj, however, said it had plans to enter Kansas City early next year in a partnership with the city. Others have doubts about an expansion as well. \u201cEmployment clusters are less geographically concentrated than they once were, so people who live near one another are less likely to be headed in the same direction,\u201d Brian McKenzie, the author of the Census Bureau report, wrote in an email. Still, smartphones have presented a more efficient way to organize commuters based on where they live and work.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThere are only a handful of cities where people live and work along densely populated corridors,\u201d Mr. Schwieterman said."} +{"question": "What invention is said to bring car-poolers together better?", "paragraph": "Whether car-pooling will expand to other cities is unclear. \u201cThere are only a handful of cities where people live and work along densely populated corridors,\u201d Mr. Schwieterman said. Bridj, however, said it had plans to enter Kansas City early next year in a partnership with the city. Others have doubts about an expansion as well. \u201cEmployment clusters are less geographically concentrated than they once were, so people who live near one another are less likely to be headed in the same direction,\u201d Brian McKenzie, the author of the Census Bureau report, wrote in an email. Still, smartphones have presented a more efficient way to organize commuters based on where they live and work.", "answer": "smartphones", "sentence": "Still, smartphones have presented a more efficient way to organize commuters based on where they live and work.", "paragraph_sentence": "Whether car-pooling will expand to other cities is unclear. \u201cThere are only a handful of cities where people live and work along densely populated corridors,\u201d Mr. Schwieterman said. Bridj, however, said it had plans to enter Kansas City early next year in a partnership with the city. Others have doubts about an expansion as well. \u201cEmployment clusters are less geographically concentrated than they once were, so people who live near one another are less likely to be headed in the same direction,\u201d Brian McKenzie, the author of the Census Bureau report, wrote in an email. Still, smartphones have presented a more efficient way to organize commuters based on where they live and work. ", "paragraph_answer": "Whether car-pooling will expand to other cities is unclear. \u201cThere are only a handful of cities where people live and work along densely populated corridors,\u201d Mr. Schwieterman said. Bridj, however, said it had plans to enter Kansas City early next year in a partnership with the city. Others have doubts about an expansion as well. \u201cEmployment clusters are less geographically concentrated than they once were, so people who live near one another are less likely to be headed in the same direction,\u201d Brian McKenzie, the author of the Census Bureau report, wrote in an email. Still, smartphones have presented a more efficient way to organize commuters based on where they live and work.", "sentence_answer": "Still, smartphones have presented a more efficient way to organize commuters based on where they live and work."} +{"question": "Were there any deaths reported?", "paragraph": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "answer": "No", "sentence": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei.", "paragraph_sentence": " No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "paragraph_answer": " No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "sentence_answer": " No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei."} +{"question": "How many people were seriously injured?", "paragraph": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "answer": "202", "sentence": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei.", "paragraph_sentence": " No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "paragraph_answer": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "sentence_answer": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei."} +{"question": "Where did the incident take place?", "paragraph": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "answer": "New Taipei City", "sentence": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City , where the incident took place, outside of Taipei.", "paragraph_sentence": " No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City , where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "paragraph_answer": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City , where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "sentence_answer": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City , where the incident took place, outside of Taipei."} +{"question": "How many hospitals received victims?", "paragraph": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "answer": "43", "sentence": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei.", "paragraph_sentence": " No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "paragraph_answer": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "sentence_answer": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei."} +{"question": "How many people were sent to local hospitals?", "paragraph": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "answer": "498", "sentence": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei.", "paragraph_sentence": " No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "paragraph_answer": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei. The injured, many suffering from serious burns and smoke inhalation, were overwhelmingly young, in their 20s or younger, with one 18-year-old woman receiving burns on 90 percent of her body, according to the official Central News Agency.", "sentence_answer": "No deaths were reported, but as of Sunday evening, 498 people had been sent to 43 area hospitals, with 202 sustaining serious injuries, according to the website of the Public Health Department of New Taipei City, where the incident took place, outside of Taipei."} +{"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."} +{"question": "Around what time did flames erupt?", "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": "8:30 p.m", "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 .", "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 ."} +{"question": "What day of the week did the incident take place?", "paragraph": "Video taken at the scene showed the flames erupting within the crowd at the event \u2014 called Color Play Asia and organized by a group using the same name \u2014 about 8:30 p.m. on Saturday, after nightfall. Some people were shown carrying the injured from the scene in inflatable rafts, and others were shown running away, silhouetted by flames. The fire was quickly controlled, but not before hundreds were hurt. Taiwan\u2019s Ministry of Health and Welfare said on its website that Taipei-area hospitals had victims requiring skin grafts. The ministry said hospitals were also urgently requesting other medical supplies needed to treat burns. The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department.", "answer": "Saturday", "sentence": "Video taken at the scene showed the flames erupting within the crowd at the event \u2014 called Color Play Asia and organized by a group using the same name \u2014 about 8:30 p.m. on Saturday , after nightfall.", "paragraph_sentence": " Video taken at the scene showed the flames erupting within the crowd at the event \u2014 called Color Play Asia and organized by a group using the same name \u2014 about 8:30 p.m. on Saturday , after nightfall. Some people were shown carrying the injured from the scene in inflatable rafts, and others were shown running away, silhouetted by flames. The fire was quickly controlled, but not before hundreds were hurt. Taiwan\u2019s Ministry of Health and Welfare said on its website that Taipei-area hospitals had victims requiring skin grafts. The ministry said hospitals were also urgently requesting other medical supplies needed to treat burns. The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department.", "paragraph_answer": "Video taken at the scene showed the flames erupting within the crowd at the event \u2014 called Color Play Asia and organized by a group using the same name \u2014 about 8:30 p.m. on Saturday , after nightfall. Some people were shown carrying the injured from the scene in inflatable rafts, and others were shown running away, silhouetted by flames. The fire was quickly controlled, but not before hundreds were hurt. Taiwan\u2019s Ministry of Health and Welfare said on its website that Taipei-area hospitals had victims requiring skin grafts. The ministry said hospitals were also urgently requesting other medical supplies needed to treat burns. The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department.", "sentence_answer": "Video taken at the scene showed the flames erupting within the crowd at the event \u2014 called Color Play Asia and organized by a group using the same name \u2014 about 8:30 p.m. on Saturday , after nightfall."} +{"question": "How many people from the United States were injured?", "paragraph": "Video taken at the scene showed the flames erupting within the crowd at the event \u2014 called Color Play Asia and organized by a group using the same name \u2014 about 8:30 p.m. on Saturday, after nightfall. Some people were shown carrying the injured from the scene in inflatable rafts, and others were shown running away, silhouetted by flames. The fire was quickly controlled, but not before hundreds were hurt. Taiwan\u2019s Ministry of Health and Welfare said on its website that Taipei-area hospitals had victims requiring skin grafts. The ministry said hospitals were also urgently requesting other medical supplies needed to treat burns. The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department.", "answer": "one person", "sentence": "The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department.", "paragraph_sentence": "Video taken at the scene showed the flames erupting within the crowd at the event \u2014 called Color Play Asia and organized by a group using the same name \u2014 about 8:30 p.m. on Saturday, after nightfall. Some people were shown carrying the injured from the scene in inflatable rafts, and others were shown running away, silhouetted by flames. The fire was quickly controlled, but not before hundreds were hurt. Taiwan\u2019s Ministry of Health and Welfare said on its website that Taipei-area hospitals had victims requiring skin grafts. The ministry said hospitals were also urgently requesting other medical supplies needed to treat burns. The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department. ", "paragraph_answer": "Video taken at the scene showed the flames erupting within the crowd at the event \u2014 called Color Play Asia and organized by a group using the same name \u2014 about 8:30 p.m. on Saturday, after nightfall. Some people were shown carrying the injured from the scene in inflatable rafts, and others were shown running away, silhouetted by flames. The fire was quickly controlled, but not before hundreds were hurt. Taiwan\u2019s Ministry of Health and Welfare said on its website that Taipei-area hospitals had victims requiring skin grafts. The ministry said hospitals were also urgently requesting other medical supplies needed to treat burns. The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department.", "sentence_answer": "The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department."} +{"question": "How many people from Hong Kong were injured?", "paragraph": "Video taken at the scene showed the flames erupting within the crowd at the event \u2014 called Color Play Asia and organized by a group using the same name \u2014 about 8:30 p.m. on Saturday, after nightfall. Some people were shown carrying the injured from the scene in inflatable rafts, and others were shown running away, silhouetted by flames. The fire was quickly controlled, but not before hundreds were hurt. Taiwan\u2019s Ministry of Health and Welfare said on its website that Taipei-area hospitals had victims requiring skin grafts. The ministry said hospitals were also urgently requesting other medical supplies needed to treat burns. The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department.", "answer": "four", "sentence": "The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department.", "paragraph_sentence": "Video taken at the scene showed the flames erupting within the crowd at the event \u2014 called Color Play Asia and organized by a group using the same name \u2014 about 8:30 p.m. on Saturday, after nightfall. Some people were shown carrying the injured from the scene in inflatable rafts, and others were shown running away, silhouetted by flames. The fire was quickly controlled, but not before hundreds were hurt. Taiwan\u2019s Ministry of Health and Welfare said on its website that Taipei-area hospitals had victims requiring skin grafts. The ministry said hospitals were also urgently requesting other medical supplies needed to treat burns. The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department. ", "paragraph_answer": "Video taken at the scene showed the flames erupting within the crowd at the event \u2014 called Color Play Asia and organized by a group using the same name \u2014 about 8:30 p.m. on Saturday, after nightfall. Some people were shown carrying the injured from the scene in inflatable rafts, and others were shown running away, silhouetted by flames. The fire was quickly controlled, but not before hundreds were hurt. Taiwan\u2019s Ministry of Health and Welfare said on its website that Taipei-area hospitals had victims requiring skin grafts. The ministry said hospitals were also urgently requesting other medical supplies needed to treat burns. The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department.", "sentence_answer": "The victims were mostly from Taiwan, but among the injured were four people from Hong Kong, one person from the United States, one from Singapore, one from Japan, one from Macau and one from Malaysia, according to the local public health department."} +{"question": "Where is SGS based?", "paragraph": "Color Play Asia said on its Facebook page that its products were in line with standards set by SGS, which is a Geneva-based testing, inspection and verification company. No one from SGS was immediately available to comment on whether Color Play Asia\u2019s products had received certification and whether that process also included tests for flammability. On Sunday, Color Play Asia\u2019s Facebook page was filled with comments expressing outrage that the event could have so quickly turned into an inferno. \u201cThe organizers just know about money, they don\u2019t know about the dangers,\u201d wrote someone going by the name of Kalin Chang. \u201cI hope you give a reasonable explanation to all the families who have been hurt by this,\u201d another person said.", "answer": "Geneva", "sentence": "a Geneva -based testing, inspection and verification company.", "paragraph_sentence": "Color Play Asia said on its Facebook page that its products were in line with standards set by SGS, which is a Geneva -based testing, inspection and verification company. No one from SGS was immediately available to comment on whether Color Play Asia\u2019s products had received certification and whether that process also included tests for flammability. On Sunday, Color Play Asia\u2019s Facebook page was filled with comments expressing outrage that the event could have so quickly turned into an inferno. \u201cThe organizers just know about money, they don\u2019t know about the dangers,\u201d wrote someone going by the name of Kalin Chang. \u201cI hope you give a reasonable explanation to all the families who have been hurt by this,\u201d another person said.", "paragraph_answer": "Color Play Asia said on its Facebook page that its products were in line with standards set by SGS, which is a Geneva -based testing, inspection and verification company. No one from SGS was immediately available to comment on whether Color Play Asia\u2019s products had received certification and whether that process also included tests for flammability. On Sunday, Color Play Asia\u2019s Facebook page was filled with comments expressing outrage that the event could have so quickly turned into an inferno. \u201cThe organizers just know about money, they don\u2019t know about the dangers,\u201d wrote someone going by the name of Kalin Chang. \u201cI hope you give a reasonable explanation to all the families who have been hurt by this,\u201d another person said.", "sentence_answer": "a Geneva -based testing, inspection and verification company."} +{"question": "What does SGS do?", "paragraph": "Color Play Asia said on its Facebook page that its products were in line with standards set by SGS, which is a Geneva-based testing, inspection and verification company. No one from SGS was immediately available to comment on whether Color Play Asia\u2019s products had received certification and whether that process also included tests for flammability. On Sunday, Color Play Asia\u2019s Facebook page was filled with comments expressing outrage that the event could have so quickly turned into an inferno. \u201cThe organizers just know about money, they don\u2019t know about the dangers,\u201d wrote someone going by the name of Kalin Chang. \u201cI hope you give a reasonable explanation to all the families who have been hurt by this,\u201d another person said.", "answer": "testing, inspection and verification", "sentence": "a Geneva-based testing, inspection and verification company.", "paragraph_sentence": "Color Play Asia said on its Facebook page that its products were in line with standards set by SGS, which is a Geneva-based testing, inspection and verification company. No one from SGS was immediately available to comment on whether Color Play Asia\u2019s products had received certification and whether that process also included tests for flammability. On Sunday, Color Play Asia\u2019s Facebook page was filled with comments expressing outrage that the event could have so quickly turned into an inferno. \u201cThe organizers just know about money, they don\u2019t know about the dangers,\u201d wrote someone going by the name of Kalin Chang. \u201cI hope you give a reasonable explanation to all the families who have been hurt by this,\u201d another person said.", "paragraph_answer": "Color Play Asia said on its Facebook page that its products were in line with standards set by SGS, which is a Geneva-based testing, inspection and verification company. No one from SGS was immediately available to comment on whether Color Play Asia\u2019s products had received certification and whether that process also included tests for flammability. On Sunday, Color Play Asia\u2019s Facebook page was filled with comments expressing outrage that the event could have so quickly turned into an inferno. \u201cThe organizers just know about money, they don\u2019t know about the dangers,\u201d wrote someone going by the name of Kalin Chang. \u201cI hope you give a reasonable explanation to all the families who have been hurt by this,\u201d another person said.", "sentence_answer": "a Geneva-based testing, inspection and verification company."} +{"question": "Who from SGS commented on the incident?", "paragraph": "Color Play Asia said on its Facebook page that its products were in line with standards set by SGS, which is a Geneva-based testing, inspection and verification company. No one from SGS was immediately available to comment on whether Color Play Asia\u2019s products had received certification and whether that process also included tests for flammability. On Sunday, Color Play Asia\u2019s Facebook page was filled with comments expressing outrage that the event could have so quickly turned into an inferno. \u201cThe organizers just know about money, they don\u2019t know about the dangers,\u201d wrote someone going by the name of Kalin Chang. \u201cI hope you give a reasonable explanation to all the families who have been hurt by this,\u201d another person said.", "answer": "No one", "sentence": "No one from SGS was immediately available to comment on whether Color Play Asia\u2019s products had received certification and whether that process also included tests for flammability.", "paragraph_sentence": "Color Play Asia said on its Facebook page that its products were in line with standards set by SGS, which is a Geneva-based testing, inspection and verification company. No one from SGS was immediately available to comment on whether Color Play Asia\u2019s products had received certification and whether that process also included tests for flammability. On Sunday, Color Play Asia\u2019s Facebook page was filled with comments expressing outrage that the event could have so quickly turned into an inferno. \u201cThe organizers just know about money, they don\u2019t know about the dangers,\u201d wrote someone going by the name of Kalin Chang. \u201cI hope you give a reasonable explanation to all the families who have been hurt by this,\u201d another person said.", "paragraph_answer": "Color Play Asia said on its Facebook page that its products were in line with standards set by SGS, which is a Geneva-based testing, inspection and verification company. No one from SGS was immediately available to comment on whether Color Play Asia\u2019s products had received certification and whether that process also included tests for flammability. On Sunday, Color Play Asia\u2019s Facebook page was filled with comments expressing outrage that the event could have so quickly turned into an inferno. \u201cThe organizers just know about money, they don\u2019t know about the dangers,\u201d wrote someone going by the name of Kalin Chang. \u201cI hope you give a reasonable explanation to all the families who have been hurt by this,\u201d another person said.", "sentence_answer": " No one from SGS was immediately available to comment on whether Color Play Asia\u2019s products had received certification and whether that process also included tests for flammability."} +{"question": "What social media site did SGS use to state that their products were in line with safety standards?", "paragraph": "Color Play Asia said on its Facebook page that its products were in line with standards set by SGS, which is a Geneva-based testing, inspection and verification company. No one from SGS was immediately available to comment on whether Color Play Asia\u2019s products had received certification and whether that process also included tests for flammability. On Sunday, Color Play Asia\u2019s Facebook page was filled with comments expressing outrage that the event could have so quickly turned into an inferno. \u201cThe organizers just know about money, they don\u2019t know about the dangers,\u201d wrote someone going by the name of Kalin Chang. \u201cI hope you give a reasonable explanation to all the families who have been hurt by this,\u201d another person said.", "answer": "Color Play Asia\u2019s Facebook page", "sentence": "On Sunday, Color Play Asia\u2019s Facebook page was filled with comments expressing outrage that the event could have so quickly turned into an inferno.", "paragraph_sentence": "Color Play Asia said on its Facebook page that its products were in line with standards set by SGS, which is a Geneva-based testing, inspection and verification company. No one from SGS was immediately available to comment on whether Color Play Asia\u2019s products had received certification and whether that process also included tests for flammability. On Sunday, Color Play Asia\u2019s Facebook page was filled with comments expressing outrage that the event could have so quickly turned into an inferno. \u201cThe organizers just know about money, they don\u2019t know about the dangers,\u201d wrote someone going by the name of Kalin Chang. \u201cI hope you give a reasonable explanation to all the families who have been hurt by this,\u201d another person said.", "paragraph_answer": "Color Play Asia said on its Facebook page that its products were in line with standards set by SGS, which is a Geneva-based testing, inspection and verification company. No one from SGS was immediately available to comment on whether Color Play Asia\u2019s products had received certification and whether that process also included tests for flammability. On Sunday, Color Play Asia\u2019s Facebook page was filled with comments expressing outrage that the event could have so quickly turned into an inferno. \u201cThe organizers just know about money, they don\u2019t know about the dangers,\u201d wrote someone going by the name of Kalin Chang. \u201cI hope you give a reasonable explanation to all the families who have been hurt by this,\u201d another person said.", "sentence_answer": "On Sunday, Color Play Asia\u2019s Facebook page was filled with comments expressing outrage that the event could have so quickly turned into an inferno."} +{"question": "Which poet is Ms. Clyne creating a chamber opera about?", "paragraph": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman. This time, Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of letters by Dickinson to jump-start the creative process, projecting her handwriting onto a wall and retracing the magnified letters with an indelible marker. The end product \u2014 fastidiously constructed compositions that typically carry a potent emotional charge \u2014 bears no traces of these playful beginnings, although Ms. Wolfe remembers Ms. Clyne turning in scores that were beautifully lettered and bound by hand. But there is a distinct sense of shape and momentum to her music that grows out of a creative process rooted in image and movement.", "answer": "Emily Dickinson", "sentence": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson , parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson , parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman. This time, Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of letters by Dickinson to jump-start the creative process, projecting her handwriting onto a wall and retracing the magnified letters with an indelible marker. The end product \u2014 fastidiously constructed compositions that typically carry a potent emotional charge \u2014 bears no traces of these playful beginnings, although Ms. Wolfe remembers Ms. Clyne turning in scores that were beautifully lettered and bound by hand. But there is a distinct sense of shape and momentum to her music that grows out of a creative process rooted in image and movement.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson , parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman. This time, Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of letters by Dickinson to jump-start the creative process, projecting her handwriting onto a wall and retracing the magnified letters with an indelible marker. The end product \u2014 fastidiously constructed compositions that typically carry a potent emotional charge \u2014 bears no traces of these playful beginnings, although Ms. Wolfe remembers Ms. Clyne turning in scores that were beautifully lettered and bound by hand. But there is a distinct sense of shape and momentum to her music that grows out of a creative process rooted in image and movement.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson , parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman."} +{"question": "Who will direct the Ensemble Signal's performance of Ms. Clyne's chamber opera?", "paragraph": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman. This time, Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of letters by Dickinson to jump-start the creative process, projecting her handwriting onto a wall and retracing the magnified letters with an indelible marker. The end product \u2014 fastidiously constructed compositions that typically carry a potent emotional charge \u2014 bears no traces of these playful beginnings, although Ms. Wolfe remembers Ms. Clyne turning in scores that were beautifully lettered and bound by hand. But there is a distinct sense of shape and momentum to her music that grows out of a creative process rooted in image and movement.", "answer": "Brad Lubman", "sentence": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman .", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman . This time, Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of letters by Dickinson to jump-start the creative process, projecting her handwriting onto a wall and retracing the magnified letters with an indelible marker. The end product \u2014 fastidiously constructed compositions that typically carry a potent emotional charge \u2014 bears no traces of these playful beginnings, although Ms. Wolfe remembers Ms. Clyne turning in scores that were beautifully lettered and bound by hand. But there is a distinct sense of shape and momentum to her music that grows out of a creative process rooted in image and movement.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman . This time, Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of letters by Dickinson to jump-start the creative process, projecting her handwriting onto a wall and retracing the magnified letters with an indelible marker. The end product \u2014 fastidiously constructed compositions that typically carry a potent emotional charge \u2014 bears no traces of these playful beginnings, although Ms. Wolfe remembers Ms. Clyne turning in scores that were beautifully lettered and bound by hand. But there is a distinct sense of shape and momentum to her music that grows out of a creative process rooted in image and movement.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman ."} +{"question": "Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of what possession of Emily Dickinson as inspiration?", "paragraph": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman. This time, Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of letters by Dickinson to jump-start the creative process, projecting her handwriting onto a wall and retracing the magnified letters with an indelible marker. The end product \u2014 fastidiously constructed compositions that typically carry a potent emotional charge \u2014 bears no traces of these playful beginnings, although Ms. Wolfe remembers Ms. Clyne turning in scores that were beautifully lettered and bound by hand. But there is a distinct sense of shape and momentum to her music that grows out of a creative process rooted in image and movement.", "answer": "letters", "sentence": "This time, Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of letters by Dickinson to jump-start the creative process, projecting her handwriting onto a wall and retracing the magnified letters with an indelible marker.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman. This time, Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of letters by Dickinson to jump-start the creative process, projecting her handwriting onto a wall and retracing the magnified letters with an indelible marker. The end product \u2014 fastidiously constructed compositions that typically carry a potent emotional charge \u2014 bears no traces of these playful beginnings, although Ms. Wolfe remembers Ms. Clyne turning in scores that were beautifully lettered and bound by hand. But there is a distinct sense of shape and momentum to her music that grows out of a creative process rooted in image and movement.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman. This time, Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of letters by Dickinson to jump-start the creative process, projecting her handwriting onto a wall and retracing the magnified letters with an indelible marker. The end product \u2014 fastidiously constructed compositions that typically carry a potent emotional charge \u2014 bears no traces of these playful beginnings, although Ms. Wolfe remembers Ms. Clyne turning in scores that were beautifully lettered and bound by hand. But there is a distinct sense of shape and momentum to her music that grows out of a creative process rooted in image and movement.", "sentence_answer": "This time, Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of letters by Dickinson to jump-start the creative process, projecting her handwriting onto a wall and retracing the magnified letters with an indelible marker."} +{"question": "Ms. Clyne's musical creation process is rooted in what?", "paragraph": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman. This time, Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of letters by Dickinson to jump-start the creative process, projecting her handwriting onto a wall and retracing the magnified letters with an indelible marker. The end product \u2014 fastidiously constructed compositions that typically carry a potent emotional charge \u2014 bears no traces of these playful beginnings, although Ms. Wolfe remembers Ms. Clyne turning in scores that were beautifully lettered and bound by hand. But there is a distinct sense of shape and momentum to her music that grows out of a creative process rooted in image and movement.", "answer": "image and movement", "sentence": "But there is a distinct sense of shape and momentum to her music that grows out of a creative process rooted in image and movement .", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman. This time, Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of letters by Dickinson to jump-start the creative process, projecting her handwriting onto a wall and retracing the magnified letters with an indelible marker. The end product \u2014 fastidiously constructed compositions that typically carry a potent emotional charge \u2014 bears no traces of these playful beginnings, although Ms. Wolfe remembers Ms. Clyne turning in scores that were beautifully lettered and bound by hand. But there is a distinct sense of shape and momentum to her music that grows out of a creative process rooted in image and movement . ", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman. This time, Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of letters by Dickinson to jump-start the creative process, projecting her handwriting onto a wall and retracing the magnified letters with an indelible marker. The end product \u2014 fastidiously constructed compositions that typically carry a potent emotional charge \u2014 bears no traces of these playful beginnings, although Ms. Wolfe remembers Ms. Clyne turning in scores that were beautifully lettered and bound by hand. But there is a distinct sense of shape and momentum to her music that grows out of a creative process rooted in image and movement .", "sentence_answer": "But there is a distinct sense of shape and momentum to her music that grows out of a creative process rooted in image and movement ."} +{"question": "At which theater will parts of the chamber opera be performed?", "paragraph": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman. This time, Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of letters by Dickinson to jump-start the creative process, projecting her handwriting onto a wall and retracing the magnified letters with an indelible marker. The end product \u2014 fastidiously constructed compositions that typically carry a potent emotional charge \u2014 bears no traces of these playful beginnings, although Ms. Wolfe remembers Ms. Clyne turning in scores that were beautifully lettered and bound by hand. But there is a distinct sense of shape and momentum to her music that grows out of a creative process rooted in image and movement.", "answer": "Miller", "sentence": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman. This time, Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of letters by Dickinson to jump-start the creative process, projecting her handwriting onto a wall and retracing the magnified letters with an indelible marker. The end product \u2014 fastidiously constructed compositions that typically carry a potent emotional charge \u2014 bears no traces of these playful beginnings, although Ms. Wolfe remembers Ms. Clyne turning in scores that were beautifully lettered and bound by hand. But there is a distinct sense of shape and momentum to her music that grows out of a creative process rooted in image and movement.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman. This time, Ms. Clyne used facsimiles of letters by Dickinson to jump-start the creative process, projecting her handwriting onto a wall and retracing the magnified letters with an indelible marker. The end product \u2014 fastidiously constructed compositions that typically carry a potent emotional charge \u2014 bears no traces of these playful beginnings, although Ms. Wolfe remembers Ms. Clyne turning in scores that were beautifully lettered and bound by hand. But there is a distinct sense of shape and momentum to her music that grows out of a creative process rooted in image and movement.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Clyne is at work on a chamber opera about the poet Emily Dickinson, parts of which will be performed at Miller by the Ensemble Signal under the direction of Brad Lubman."} +{"question": "Ms. Clyne originally composed what type of music?", "paragraph": "Ms. Clyne\u2019s attention to craft across different media is all the more noteworthy because she started out as a composer of electronic music \u2014 an intangible art form. Ms. Clyne, who was born in London, spoke about her creative process during a recent interview over tea and McVitie\u2019s biscuits in her sunlit apartment in Brooklyn. To avoid becoming bogged down in habit and \u201ctendencies,\u201d she seeks out conversations across disciplines \u2014 whether in collaboration with choreographers and visual artists or, as in the case of the \u201cNight Ferry\u201d collages, with her own inner painter. \u201cIt was like a timeline,\u201d she said of the seven panels, which each represented three minutes of music. \u201cI knew I wanted it to have a very turbulent beginning. I\u2019d paint that, and then I\u2019d write it. It would keep me on track.\u201d The Miller program includes \u201cFits and Starts,\u201d for solo cello and electronics, which she wrote for the choreographer Kitty McNamee and in which an increasingly lyrical and impassioned cello line coalesces out of skittish and distorted beginnings. In a phone interview, Ms. McNamee described Ms. Clyne\u2019s musical language as \u201cvery visual,\u201d adding: \u201cIt has incredible tension and release, which is very helpful to me. It has great shape to it.\u201d", "answer": "electronic", "sentence": "Ms. Clyne\u2019s attention to craft across different media is all the more noteworthy because she started out as a composer of electronic music \u2014 an intangible art form.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Clyne\u2019s attention to craft across different media is all the more noteworthy because she started out as a composer of electronic music \u2014 an intangible art form. Ms. Clyne, who was born in London, spoke about her creative process during a recent interview over tea and McVitie\u2019s biscuits in her sunlit apartment in Brooklyn. To avoid becoming bogged down in habit and \u201ctendencies,\u201d she seeks out conversations across disciplines \u2014 whether in collaboration with choreographers and visual artists or, as in the case of the \u201cNight Ferry\u201d collages, with her own inner painter. \u201cIt was like a timeline,\u201d she said of the seven panels, which each represented three minutes of music. \u201cI knew I wanted it to have a very turbulent beginning. I\u2019d paint that, and then I\u2019d write it. It would keep me on track.\u201d The Miller program includes \u201cFits and Starts,\u201d for solo cello and electronics, which she wrote for the choreographer Kitty McNamee and in which an increasingly lyrical and impassioned cello line coalesces out of skittish and distorted beginnings. In a phone interview, Ms. McNamee described Ms. Clyne\u2019s musical language as \u201cvery visual,\u201d adding: \u201cIt has incredible tension and release, which is very helpful to me. It has great shape to it.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Clyne\u2019s attention to craft across different media is all the more noteworthy because she started out as a composer of electronic music \u2014 an intangible art form. Ms. Clyne, who was born in London, spoke about her creative process during a recent interview over tea and McVitie\u2019s biscuits in her sunlit apartment in Brooklyn. To avoid becoming bogged down in habit and \u201ctendencies,\u201d she seeks out conversations across disciplines \u2014 whether in collaboration with choreographers and visual artists or, as in the case of the \u201cNight Ferry\u201d collages, with her own inner painter. \u201cIt was like a timeline,\u201d she said of the seven panels, which each represented three minutes of music. \u201cI knew I wanted it to have a very turbulent beginning. I\u2019d paint that, and then I\u2019d write it. It would keep me on track.\u201d The Miller program includes \u201cFits and Starts,\u201d for solo cello and electronics, which she wrote for the choreographer Kitty McNamee and in which an increasingly lyrical and impassioned cello line coalesces out of skittish and distorted beginnings. In a phone interview, Ms. McNamee described Ms. Clyne\u2019s musical language as \u201cvery visual,\u201d adding: \u201cIt has incredible tension and release, which is very helpful to me. It has great shape to it.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Clyne\u2019s attention to craft across different media is all the more noteworthy because she started out as a composer of electronic music \u2014 an intangible art form."} +{"question": "Where does Ms. Clyne currently live?", "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": "Brooklyn", "sentence": "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 .", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Clyne\u2019s attention to craft across different media is all the more noteworthy because she started out as a composer of electronic music \u2014 an intangible art form. Ms. Clyne, who was born in London, spoke about her creative process during a recent interview over tea and McVitie\u2019s biscuits in her sunlit apartment in Brooklyn . To avoid becoming bogged down in habit and \u201ctendencies,\u201d she seeks out conversations across disciplines \u2014 whether in collaboration with choreographers and visual artists or, as in the case of the \u201cNight Ferry\u201d collages, with her own inner painter. \u201cIt was like a timeline,\u201d she said of the seven panels, which each represented three minutes of music. \u201cI knew I wanted it to have a very turbulent beginning. I\u2019d paint that, and then I\u2019d write it. It would keep me on track.\u201d The Miller program includes \u201cFits and Starts,\u201d for solo cello and electronics, which she wrote for the choreographer Kitty McNamee and in which an increasingly lyrical and impassioned cello line coalesces out of skittish and distorted beginnings. In a phone interview, Ms. McNamee described Ms. Clyne\u2019s musical language as \u201cvery visual,\u201d adding: \u201cIt has incredible tension and release, which is very helpful to me. It has great shape to it.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Clyne\u2019s attention to craft across different media is all the more noteworthy because she started out as a composer of electronic music \u2014 an intangible art form. Ms. Clyne, who was born in London, spoke about her creative process during a recent interview over tea and McVitie\u2019s biscuits in her sunlit apartment in Brooklyn . To avoid becoming bogged down in habit and \u201ctendencies,\u201d she seeks out conversations across disciplines \u2014 whether in collaboration with choreographers and visual artists or, as in the case of the \u201cNight Ferry\u201d collages, with her own inner painter. \u201cIt was like a timeline,\u201d she said of the seven panels, which each represented three minutes of music. \u201cI knew I wanted it to have a very turbulent beginning. I\u2019d paint that, and then I\u2019d write it. It would keep me on track.\u201d The Miller program includes \u201cFits and Starts,\u201d for solo cello and electronics, which she wrote for the choreographer Kitty McNamee and in which an increasingly lyrical and impassioned cello line coalesces out of skittish and distorted beginnings. In a phone interview, Ms. McNamee described Ms. Clyne\u2019s musical language as \u201cvery visual,\u201d adding: \u201cIt has incredible tension and release, which is very helpful to me. It has great shape to it.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Clyne, 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 ."} +{"question": "Where was Ms. Clyne born?", "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": "London", "sentence": "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.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Clyne\u2019s attention to craft across different media is all the more noteworthy because she started out as a composer of electronic music \u2014 an intangible art form. Ms. Clyne, who was born in London , spoke about her creative process during a recent interview over tea and McVitie\u2019s biscuits in her sunlit apartment in Brooklyn. To avoid becoming bogged down in habit and \u201ctendencies,\u201d she seeks out conversations across disciplines \u2014 whether in collaboration with choreographers and visual artists or, as in the case of the \u201cNight Ferry\u201d collages, with her own inner painter. \u201cIt was like a timeline,\u201d she said of the seven panels, which each represented three minutes of music. \u201cI knew I wanted it to have a very turbulent beginning. I\u2019d paint that, and then I\u2019d write it. It would keep me on track.\u201d The Miller program includes \u201cFits and Starts,\u201d for solo cello and electronics, which she wrote for the choreographer Kitty McNamee and in which an increasingly lyrical and impassioned cello line coalesces out of skittish and distorted beginnings. In a phone interview, Ms. McNamee described Ms. Clyne\u2019s musical language as \u201cvery visual,\u201d adding: \u201cIt has incredible tension and release, which is very helpful to me. It has great shape to it.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Clyne\u2019s attention to craft across different media is all the more noteworthy because she started out as a composer of electronic music \u2014 an intangible art form. Ms. Clyne, who was born in London , spoke about her creative process during a recent interview over tea and McVitie\u2019s biscuits in her sunlit apartment in Brooklyn. To avoid becoming bogged down in habit and \u201ctendencies,\u201d she seeks out conversations across disciplines \u2014 whether in collaboration with choreographers and visual artists or, as in the case of the \u201cNight Ferry\u201d collages, with her own inner painter. \u201cIt was like a timeline,\u201d she said of the seven panels, which each represented three minutes of music. \u201cI knew I wanted it to have a very turbulent beginning. I\u2019d paint that, and then I\u2019d write it. It would keep me on track.\u201d The Miller program includes \u201cFits and Starts,\u201d for solo cello and electronics, which she wrote for the choreographer Kitty McNamee and in which an increasingly lyrical and impassioned cello line coalesces out of skittish and distorted beginnings. In a phone interview, Ms. McNamee described Ms. Clyne\u2019s musical language as \u201cvery visual,\u201d adding: \u201cIt has incredible tension and release, which is very helpful to me. It has great shape to it.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Clyne, 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."} +{"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."} +{"question": "The choreographer that Ms. Clyne worked with said that Ms. Clyne's music has great what to it?", "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": "shape", "sentence": "It has great shape to it.\u201d", "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": "It has great shape to it.\u201d"} +{"question": "Where does Ms. Clyne keep her drafts?", "paragraph": "On her computer are drafts for a work for chamber ensemble and taped spoken word, featuring the voice of John Cage. On the desk are a pair of headphones, which Ms. Clyne will wear to listen to draft versions of her piece while walking, gesturing, dancing through the room. \u201cIt\u2019s a way to connect to the physicality of the music,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019ll put this on and not look at the score and just move to see if it feels right.\u201d She\u2019s not a dancer any more than she is a painter, and said she would be \u201cmortified\u201d if anyone saw her doing it. But it\u2019s a process she trusts \u2014 at least for now, for this piece. At any rate, she said, \u201cI\u2019m having to invent things each time.\u201d", "answer": "On her computer", "sentence": "On her computer are drafts for a work for chamber ensemble and taped spoken word, featuring the voice of John Cage.", "paragraph_sentence": " On her computer are drafts for a work for chamber ensemble and taped spoken word, featuring the voice of John Cage. On the desk are a pair of headphones, which Ms. Clyne will wear to listen to draft versions of her piece while walking, gesturing, dancing through the room. \u201cIt\u2019s a way to connect to the physicality of the music,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019ll put this on and not look at the score and just move to see if it feels right.\u201d She\u2019s not a dancer any more than she is a painter, and said she would be \u201cmortified\u201d if anyone saw her doing it. But it\u2019s a process she trusts \u2014 at least for now, for this piece. At any rate, she said, \u201cI\u2019m having to invent things each time.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " On her computer are drafts for a work for chamber ensemble and taped spoken word, featuring the voice of John Cage. On the desk are a pair of headphones, which Ms. Clyne will wear to listen to draft versions of her piece while walking, gesturing, dancing through the room. \u201cIt\u2019s a way to connect to the physicality of the music,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019ll put this on and not look at the score and just move to see if it feels right.\u201d She\u2019s not a dancer any more than she is a painter, and said she would be \u201cmortified\u201d if anyone saw her doing it. But it\u2019s a process she trusts \u2014 at least for now, for this piece. At any rate, she said, \u201cI\u2019m having to invent things each time.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " On her computer are drafts for a work for chamber ensemble and taped spoken word, featuring the voice of John Cage."} +{"question": "What does Ms. Clyne use to listn to her music while dancing?", "paragraph": "On her computer are drafts for a work for chamber ensemble and taped spoken word, featuring the voice of John Cage. On the desk are a pair of headphones, which Ms. Clyne will wear to listen to draft versions of her piece while walking, gesturing, dancing through the room. \u201cIt\u2019s a way to connect to the physicality of the music,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019ll put this on and not look at the score and just move to see if it feels right.\u201d She\u2019s not a dancer any more than she is a painter, and said she would be \u201cmortified\u201d if anyone saw her doing it. But it\u2019s a process she trusts \u2014 at least for now, for this piece. At any rate, she said, \u201cI\u2019m having to invent things each time.\u201d", "answer": "headphones", "sentence": "On the desk are a pair of headphones , which Ms. Clyne will wear to listen to draft versions of her piece while walking, gesturing, dancing through the room.", "paragraph_sentence": "On her computer are drafts for a work for chamber ensemble and taped spoken word, featuring the voice of John Cage. On the desk are a pair of headphones , which Ms. Clyne will wear to listen to draft versions of her piece while walking, gesturing, dancing through the room. \u201cIt\u2019s a way to connect to the physicality of the music,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019ll put this on and not look at the score and just move to see if it feels right.\u201d She\u2019s not a dancer any more than she is a painter, and said she would be \u201cmortified\u201d if anyone saw her doing it. But it\u2019s a process she trusts \u2014 at least for now, for this piece. At any rate, she said, \u201cI\u2019m having to invent things each time.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "On her computer are drafts for a work for chamber ensemble and taped spoken word, featuring the voice of John Cage. On the desk are a pair of headphones , which Ms. Clyne will wear to listen to draft versions of her piece while walking, gesturing, dancing through the room. \u201cIt\u2019s a way to connect to the physicality of the music,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019ll put this on and not look at the score and just move to see if it feels right.\u201d She\u2019s not a dancer any more than she is a painter, and said she would be \u201cmortified\u201d if anyone saw her doing it. But it\u2019s a process she trusts \u2014 at least for now, for this piece. At any rate, she said, \u201cI\u2019m having to invent things each time.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "On the desk are a pair of headphones , which Ms. Clyne will wear to listen to draft versions of her piece while walking, gesturing, dancing through the room."} +{"question": "When Ms. Clyne puts on her headphones and doesn't look at the score, what is she trying to discover about her music?", "paragraph": "On her computer are drafts for a work for chamber ensemble and taped spoken word, featuring the voice of John Cage. On the desk are a pair of headphones, which Ms. Clyne will wear to listen to draft versions of her piece while walking, gesturing, dancing through the room. \u201cIt\u2019s a way to connect to the physicality of the music,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019ll put this on and not look at the score and just move to see if it feels right.\u201d She\u2019s not a dancer any more than she is a painter, and said she would be \u201cmortified\u201d if anyone saw her doing it. But it\u2019s a process she trusts \u2014 at least for now, for this piece. At any rate, she said, \u201cI\u2019m having to invent things each time.\u201d", "answer": "if it feels right", "sentence": "\u201cI\u2019ll put this on and not look at the score and just move to see if it feels right .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "On her computer are drafts for a work for chamber ensemble and taped spoken word, featuring the voice of John Cage. On the desk are a pair of headphones, which Ms. Clyne will wear to listen to draft versions of her piece while walking, gesturing, dancing through the room. \u201cIt\u2019s a way to connect to the physicality of the music,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019ll put this on and not look at the score and just move to see if it feels right .\u201d She\u2019s not a dancer any more than she is a painter, and said she would be \u201cmortified\u201d if anyone saw her doing it. But it\u2019s a process she trusts \u2014 at least for now, for this piece. At any rate, she said, \u201cI\u2019m having to invent things each time.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "On her computer are drafts for a work for chamber ensemble and taped spoken word, featuring the voice of John Cage. On the desk are a pair of headphones, which Ms. Clyne will wear to listen to draft versions of her piece while walking, gesturing, dancing through the room. \u201cIt\u2019s a way to connect to the physicality of the music,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019ll put this on and not look at the score and just move to see if it feels right .\u201d She\u2019s not a dancer any more than she is a painter, and said she would be \u201cmortified\u201d if anyone saw her doing it. But it\u2019s a process she trusts \u2014 at least for now, for this piece. At any rate, she said, \u201cI\u2019m having to invent things each time.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI\u2019ll put this on and not look at the score and just move to see if it feels right .\u201d"} +{"question": "Ms. Clyne said she would feel what emotion if someone caught her dancing?", "paragraph": "On her computer are drafts for a work for chamber ensemble and taped spoken word, featuring the voice of John Cage. On the desk are a pair of headphones, which Ms. Clyne will wear to listen to draft versions of her piece while walking, gesturing, dancing through the room. \u201cIt\u2019s a way to connect to the physicality of the music,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019ll put this on and not look at the score and just move to see if it feels right.\u201d She\u2019s not a dancer any more than she is a painter, and said she would be \u201cmortified\u201d if anyone saw her doing it. But it\u2019s a process she trusts \u2014 at least for now, for this piece. At any rate, she said, \u201cI\u2019m having to invent things each time.\u201d", "answer": "mortified", "sentence": "She\u2019s not a dancer any more than she is a painter, and said she would be \u201c mortified \u201d if anyone saw her doing it.", "paragraph_sentence": "On her computer are drafts for a work for chamber ensemble and taped spoken word, featuring the voice of John Cage. On the desk are a pair of headphones, which Ms. Clyne will wear to listen to draft versions of her piece while walking, gesturing, dancing through the room. \u201cIt\u2019s a way to connect to the physicality of the music,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019ll put this on and not look at the score and just move to see if it feels right.\u201d She\u2019s not a dancer any more than she is a painter, and said she would be \u201c mortified \u201d if anyone saw her doing it. But it\u2019s a process she trusts \u2014 at least for now, for this piece. At any rate, she said, \u201cI\u2019m having to invent things each time.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "On her computer are drafts for a work for chamber ensemble and taped spoken word, featuring the voice of John Cage. On the desk are a pair of headphones, which Ms. Clyne will wear to listen to draft versions of her piece while walking, gesturing, dancing through the room. \u201cIt\u2019s a way to connect to the physicality of the music,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019ll put this on and not look at the score and just move to see if it feels right.\u201d She\u2019s not a dancer any more than she is a painter, and said she would be \u201c mortified \u201d if anyone saw her doing it. But it\u2019s a process she trusts \u2014 at least for now, for this piece. At any rate, she said, \u201cI\u2019m having to invent things each time.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "She\u2019s not a dancer any more than she is a painter, and said she would be \u201c mortified \u201d if anyone saw her doing it."} +{"question": "How many visits has the tracker got since it debut in October?", "paragraph": "The department also created a capital projects \u201ctracker\u201d on its website so that people can check on the status of park construction. The feature, which is updated monthly, has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October. While the department\u2019s options are limited when it comes to soliciting bids, Mr. Silver did say that he planned to bundle several smaller projects into one \u2014 five Brooklyn dog runs, for example. That could make the job more attractive to prospective contractors.", "answer": "56,000", "sentence": "The feature, which is updated monthly, has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October.", "paragraph_sentence": "The department also created a capital projects \u201ctracker\u201d on its website so that people can check on the status of park construction. The feature, which is updated monthly, has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October. While the department\u2019s options are limited when it comes to soliciting bids, Mr. Silver did say that he planned to bundle several smaller projects into one \u2014 five Brooklyn dog runs, for example. That could make the job more attractive to prospective contractors.", "paragraph_answer": "The department also created a capital projects \u201ctracker\u201d on its website so that people can check on the status of park construction. The feature, which is updated monthly, has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October. While the department\u2019s options are limited when it comes to soliciting bids, Mr. Silver did say that he planned to bundle several smaller projects into one \u2014 five Brooklyn dog runs, for example. That could make the job more attractive to prospective contractors.", "sentence_answer": "The feature, which is updated monthly, has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October."} +{"question": "The capital projects \"tracker\" is updated how often?", "paragraph": "The department also created a capital projects \u201ctracker\u201d on its website so that people can check on the status of park construction. The feature, which is updated monthly, has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October. While the department\u2019s options are limited when it comes to soliciting bids, Mr. Silver did say that he planned to bundle several smaller projects into one \u2014 five Brooklyn dog runs, for example. That could make the job more attractive to prospective contractors.", "answer": "monthly", "sentence": "The feature, which is updated monthly , has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October.", "paragraph_sentence": "The department also created a capital projects \u201ctracker\u201d on its website so that people can check on the status of park construction. The feature, which is updated monthly , has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October. While the department\u2019s options are limited when it comes to soliciting bids, Mr. Silver did say that he planned to bundle several smaller projects into one \u2014 five Brooklyn dog runs, for example. That could make the job more attractive to prospective contractors.", "paragraph_answer": "The department also created a capital projects \u201ctracker\u201d on its website so that people can check on the status of park construction. The feature, which is updated monthly , has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October. While the department\u2019s options are limited when it comes to soliciting bids, Mr. Silver did say that he planned to bundle several smaller projects into one \u2014 five Brooklyn dog runs, for example. That could make the job more attractive to prospective contractors.", "sentence_answer": "The feature, which is updated monthly , has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October."} +{"question": "How many Brooklyn dog runs could be combined into one?", "paragraph": "The department also created a capital projects \u201ctracker\u201d on its website so that people can check on the status of park construction. The feature, which is updated monthly, has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October. While the department\u2019s options are limited when it comes to soliciting bids, Mr. Silver did say that he planned to bundle several smaller projects into one \u2014 five Brooklyn dog runs, for example. That could make the job more attractive to prospective contractors.", "answer": "five", "sentence": "While the department\u2019s options are limited when it comes to soliciting bids, Mr. Silver did say that he planned to bundle several smaller projects into one \u2014 five Brooklyn dog runs, for example.", "paragraph_sentence": "The department also created a capital projects \u201ctracker\u201d on its website so that people can check on the status of park construction. The feature, which is updated monthly, has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October. While the department\u2019s options are limited when it comes to soliciting bids, Mr. Silver did say that he planned to bundle several smaller projects into one \u2014 five Brooklyn dog runs, for example. That could make the job more attractive to prospective contractors.", "paragraph_answer": "The department also created a capital projects \u201ctracker\u201d on its website so that people can check on the status of park construction. The feature, which is updated monthly, has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October. While the department\u2019s options are limited when it comes to soliciting bids, Mr. Silver did say that he planned to bundle several smaller projects into one \u2014 five Brooklyn dog runs, for example. That could make the job more attractive to prospective contractors.", "sentence_answer": "While the department\u2019s options are limited when it comes to soliciting bids, Mr. Silver did say that he planned to bundle several smaller projects into one \u2014 five Brooklyn dog runs, for example."} +{"question": "When did the capital projects tracker debut on the website?", "paragraph": "The department also created a capital projects \u201ctracker\u201d on its website so that people can check on the status of park construction. The feature, which is updated monthly, has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October. While the department\u2019s options are limited when it comes to soliciting bids, Mr. Silver did say that he planned to bundle several smaller projects into one \u2014 five Brooklyn dog runs, for example. That could make the job more attractive to prospective contractors.", "answer": "October", "sentence": "The feature, which is updated monthly, has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October .", "paragraph_sentence": "The department also created a capital projects \u201ctracker\u201d on its website so that people can check on the status of park construction. The feature, which is updated monthly, has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October . While the department\u2019s options are limited when it comes to soliciting bids, Mr. Silver did say that he planned to bundle several smaller projects into one \u2014 five Brooklyn dog runs, for example. That could make the job more attractive to prospective contractors.", "paragraph_answer": "The department also created a capital projects \u201ctracker\u201d on its website so that people can check on the status of park construction. The feature, which is updated monthly, has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October . While the department\u2019s options are limited when it comes to soliciting bids, Mr. Silver did say that he planned to bundle several smaller projects into one \u2014 five Brooklyn dog runs, for example. That could make the job more attractive to prospective contractors.", "sentence_answer": "The feature, which is updated monthly, has had 56,000 visits since it made its debut in October ."} +{"question": "What advocacy group released the critical report?", "paragraph": "In June, the advocacy group New Yorkers for Parks released a critical report comparing the management of capital projects by the parks department with that of other public agencies. While Mr. Silver questioned the fairness of some of the comparisons, he nonetheless said that the slow pace of construction would be a chief focus of his first year as commissioner. Tupper Thomas, executive director of New Yorkers for Parks, called the changes \u201ca great start.\u201d Ms. Thomas previously served as the president of the Prospect Park Alliance and the Prospect Park administrator for the parks department. In both capacities, she saw how long it took to finish projects. She said she especially approved of the idea of standardizing design for certain things, like restrooms, rather than creating each one from scratch. \u201cIt totally makes sense,\u201d she said. \u201cYou work with the guys in the technical shops who say, \u2018Don\u2019t use that flushometer; it doesn\u2019t work.\u2019 It saves time, and the plumbers know what valves to get.\u201d Others, however, are waiting for more aggressive changes, particularly in the area of procurement. No fewer than six city agencies get involved in bidding. Matthew Marienthal, an organizer for East Brooklyn Congregations, a coalition of churches and nonprofit groups, said Mr. Silver should \u201ctake the lead\u201d in reforming the procurement process, even if it meant \u201ccreating some tension\u201d with the mayor. Last month, the group invited Mr. Silver to speak to 650 residents assembled at St. Barbara\u2019s Church in Bushwick, Brooklyn. They had won pledges from the parks department last year to renovate two neighborhood spaces \u2014 Heckscher Playground and Green Central Knoll Park \u2014 and they wanted to know when the projects would be finished. Mr. Silver said that Heckscher would be done in spring 2017 and Green Central Knoll in October 2017. Work, however, has not started on either park. Adriane Williams, a leader of East Brooklyn Congregations, told Mr. Silver at the meeting, \u201cWe think a process where the most simple of fixes take three years is no process at all, just a mess.\u201d", "answer": "New Yorkers for Parks", "sentence": "In June, the advocacy group New Yorkers for Parks released a critical report comparing the management of capital projects by the parks department with that of other public agencies.", "paragraph_sentence": " In June, the advocacy group New Yorkers for Parks released a critical report comparing the management of capital projects by the parks department with that of other public agencies. While Mr. Silver questioned the fairness of some of the comparisons, he nonetheless said that the slow pace of construction would be a chief focus of his first year as commissioner. Tupper Thomas, executive director of New Yorkers for Parks, called the changes \u201ca great start.\u201d Ms. Thomas previously served as the president of the Prospect Park Alliance and the Prospect Park administrator for the parks department. In both capacities, she saw how long it took to finish projects. She said she especially approved of the idea of standardizing design for certain things, like restrooms, rather than creating each one from scratch. \u201cIt totally makes sense,\u201d she said. \u201cYou work with the guys in the technical shops who say, \u2018Don\u2019t use that flushometer; it doesn\u2019t work.\u2019 It saves time, and the plumbers know what valves to get.\u201d Others, however, are waiting for more aggressive changes, particularly in the area of procurement. No fewer than six city agencies get involved in bidding. Matthew Marienthal, an organizer for East Brooklyn Congregations, a coalition of churches and nonprofit groups, said Mr. Silver should \u201ctake the lead\u201d in reforming the procurement process, even if it meant \u201ccreating some tension\u201d with the mayor. Last month, the group invited Mr. Silver to speak to 650 residents assembled at St. Barbara\u2019s Church in Bushwick, Brooklyn. They had won pledges from the parks department last year to renovate two neighborhood spaces \u2014 Heckscher Playground and Green Central Knoll Park \u2014 and they wanted to know when the projects would be finished. Mr. Silver said that Heckscher would be done in spring 2017 and Green Central Knoll in October 2017. Work, however, has not started on either park. Adriane Williams, a leader of East Brooklyn Congregations, told Mr. Silver at the meeting, \u201cWe think a process where the most simple of fixes take three years is no process at all, just a mess.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In June, the advocacy group New Yorkers for Parks released a critical report comparing the management of capital projects by the parks department with that of other public agencies. While Mr. Silver questioned the fairness of some of the comparisons, he nonetheless said that the slow pace of construction would be a chief focus of his first year as commissioner. Tupper Thomas, executive director of New Yorkers for Parks, called the changes \u201ca great start.\u201d Ms. Thomas previously served as the president of the Prospect Park Alliance and the Prospect Park administrator for the parks department. In both capacities, she saw how long it took to finish projects. She said she especially approved of the idea of standardizing design for certain things, like restrooms, rather than creating each one from scratch. \u201cIt totally makes sense,\u201d she said. \u201cYou work with the guys in the technical shops who say, \u2018Don\u2019t use that flushometer; it doesn\u2019t work.\u2019 It saves time, and the plumbers know what valves to get.\u201d Others, however, are waiting for more aggressive changes, particularly in the area of procurement. No fewer than six city agencies get involved in bidding. Matthew Marienthal, an organizer for East Brooklyn Congregations, a coalition of churches and nonprofit groups, said Mr. Silver should \u201ctake the lead\u201d in reforming the procurement process, even if it meant \u201ccreating some tension\u201d with the mayor. Last month, the group invited Mr. Silver to speak to 650 residents assembled at St. Barbara\u2019s Church in Bushwick, Brooklyn. They had won pledges from the parks department last year to renovate two neighborhood spaces \u2014 Heckscher Playground and Green Central Knoll Park \u2014 and they wanted to know when the projects would be finished. Mr. Silver said that Heckscher would be done in spring 2017 and Green Central Knoll in October 2017. Work, however, has not started on either park. Adriane Williams, a leader of East Brooklyn Congregations, told Mr. Silver at the meeting, \u201cWe think a process where the most simple of fixes take three years is no process at all, just a mess.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In June, the advocacy group New Yorkers for Parks released a critical report comparing the management of capital projects by the parks department with that of other public agencies."} +{"question": "How many city agencies get involved in the bidding process?", "paragraph": "In June, the advocacy group New Yorkers for Parks released a critical report comparing the management of capital projects by the parks department with that of other public agencies. While Mr. Silver questioned the fairness of some of the comparisons, he nonetheless said that the slow pace of construction would be a chief focus of his first year as commissioner. Tupper Thomas, executive director of New Yorkers for Parks, called the changes \u201ca great start.\u201d Ms. Thomas previously served as the president of the Prospect Park Alliance and the Prospect Park administrator for the parks department. In both capacities, she saw how long it took to finish projects. She said she especially approved of the idea of standardizing design for certain things, like restrooms, rather than creating each one from scratch. \u201cIt totally makes sense,\u201d she said. \u201cYou work with the guys in the technical shops who say, \u2018Don\u2019t use that flushometer; it doesn\u2019t work.\u2019 It saves time, and the plumbers know what valves to get.\u201d Others, however, are waiting for more aggressive changes, particularly in the area of procurement. No fewer than six city agencies get involved in bidding. Matthew Marienthal, an organizer for East Brooklyn Congregations, a coalition of churches and nonprofit groups, said Mr. Silver should \u201ctake the lead\u201d in reforming the procurement process, even if it meant \u201ccreating some tension\u201d with the mayor. Last month, the group invited Mr. Silver to speak to 650 residents assembled at St. Barbara\u2019s Church in Bushwick, Brooklyn. They had won pledges from the parks department last year to renovate two neighborhood spaces \u2014 Heckscher Playground and Green Central Knoll Park \u2014 and they wanted to know when the projects would be finished. Mr. Silver said that Heckscher would be done in spring 2017 and Green Central Knoll in October 2017. Work, however, has not started on either park. Adriane Williams, a leader of East Brooklyn Congregations, told Mr. Silver at the meeting, \u201cWe think a process where the most simple of fixes take three years is no process at all, just a mess.\u201d", "answer": "six", "sentence": "No fewer than six city agencies get involved in bidding.", "paragraph_sentence": "In June, the advocacy group New Yorkers for Parks released a critical report comparing the management of capital projects by the parks department with that of other public agencies. While Mr. Silver questioned the fairness of some of the comparisons, he nonetheless said that the slow pace of construction would be a chief focus of his first year as commissioner. Tupper Thomas, executive director of New Yorkers for Parks, called the changes \u201ca great start.\u201d Ms. Thomas previously served as the president of the Prospect Park Alliance and the Prospect Park administrator for the parks department. In both capacities, she saw how long it took to finish projects. She said she especially approved of the idea of standardizing design for certain things, like restrooms, rather than creating each one from scratch. \u201cIt totally makes sense,\u201d she said. \u201cYou work with the guys in the technical shops who say, \u2018Don\u2019t use that flushometer; it doesn\u2019t work.\u2019 It saves time, and the plumbers know what valves to get.\u201d Others, however, are waiting for more aggressive changes, particularly in the area of procurement. No fewer than six city agencies get involved in bidding. Matthew Marienthal, an organizer for East Brooklyn Congregations, a coalition of churches and nonprofit groups, said Mr. Silver should \u201ctake the lead\u201d in reforming the procurement process, even if it meant \u201ccreating some tension\u201d with the mayor. Last month, the group invited Mr. Silver to speak to 650 residents assembled at St. Barbara\u2019s Church in Bushwick, Brooklyn. They had won pledges from the parks department last year to renovate two neighborhood spaces \u2014 Heckscher Playground and Green Central Knoll Park \u2014 and they wanted to know when the projects would be finished. Mr. Silver said that Heckscher would be done in spring 2017 and Green Central Knoll in October 2017. Work, however, has not started on either park. Adriane Williams, a leader of East Brooklyn Congregations, told Mr. Silver at the meeting, \u201cWe think a process where the most simple of fixes take three years is no process at all, just a mess.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In June, the advocacy group New Yorkers for Parks released a critical report comparing the management of capital projects by the parks department with that of other public agencies. While Mr. Silver questioned the fairness of some of the comparisons, he nonetheless said that the slow pace of construction would be a chief focus of his first year as commissioner. Tupper Thomas, executive director of New Yorkers for Parks, called the changes \u201ca great start.\u201d Ms. Thomas previously served as the president of the Prospect Park Alliance and the Prospect Park administrator for the parks department. In both capacities, she saw how long it took to finish projects. She said she especially approved of the idea of standardizing design for certain things, like restrooms, rather than creating each one from scratch. \u201cIt totally makes sense,\u201d she said. \u201cYou work with the guys in the technical shops who say, \u2018Don\u2019t use that flushometer; it doesn\u2019t work.\u2019 It saves time, and the plumbers know what valves to get.\u201d Others, however, are waiting for more aggressive changes, particularly in the area of procurement. No fewer than six city agencies get involved in bidding. Matthew Marienthal, an organizer for East Brooklyn Congregations, a coalition of churches and nonprofit groups, said Mr. Silver should \u201ctake the lead\u201d in reforming the procurement process, even if it meant \u201ccreating some tension\u201d with the mayor. Last month, the group invited Mr. Silver to speak to 650 residents assembled at St. Barbara\u2019s Church in Bushwick, Brooklyn. They had won pledges from the parks department last year to renovate two neighborhood spaces \u2014 Heckscher Playground and Green Central Knoll Park \u2014 and they wanted to know when the projects would be finished. Mr. Silver said that Heckscher would be done in spring 2017 and Green Central Knoll in October 2017. Work, however, has not started on either park. Adriane Williams, a leader of East Brooklyn Congregations, told Mr. Silver at the meeting, \u201cWe think a process where the most simple of fixes take three years is no process at all, just a mess.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "No fewer than six city agencies get involved in bidding."} +{"question": "Who is the commissioner of the parks department?", "paragraph": "In June, the advocacy group New Yorkers for Parks released a critical report comparing the management of capital projects by the parks department with that of other public agencies. While Mr. Silver questioned the fairness of some of the comparisons, he nonetheless said that the slow pace of construction would be a chief focus of his first year as commissioner. Tupper Thomas, executive director of New Yorkers for Parks, called the changes \u201ca great start.\u201d Ms. Thomas previously served as the president of the Prospect Park Alliance and the Prospect Park administrator for the parks department. In both capacities, she saw how long it took to finish projects. She said she especially approved of the idea of standardizing design for certain things, like restrooms, rather than creating each one from scratch. \u201cIt totally makes sense,\u201d she said. \u201cYou work with the guys in the technical shops who say, \u2018Don\u2019t use that flushometer; it doesn\u2019t work.\u2019 It saves time, and the plumbers know what valves to get.\u201d Others, however, are waiting for more aggressive changes, particularly in the area of procurement. No fewer than six city agencies get involved in bidding. Matthew Marienthal, an organizer for East Brooklyn Congregations, a coalition of churches and nonprofit groups, said Mr. Silver should \u201ctake the lead\u201d in reforming the procurement process, even if it meant \u201ccreating some tension\u201d with the mayor. Last month, the group invited Mr. Silver to speak to 650 residents assembled at St. Barbara\u2019s Church in Bushwick, Brooklyn. They had won pledges from the parks department last year to renovate two neighborhood spaces \u2014 Heckscher Playground and Green Central Knoll Park \u2014 and they wanted to know when the projects would be finished. Mr. Silver said that Heckscher would be done in spring 2017 and Green Central Knoll in October 2017. Work, however, has not started on either park. Adriane Williams, a leader of East Brooklyn Congregations, told Mr. Silver at the meeting, \u201cWe think a process where the most simple of fixes take three years is no process at all, just a mess.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Silver", "sentence": "While Mr. Silver questioned the fairness of some of the comparisons, he nonetheless said that the slow pace of construction would be a chief focus of his first year as commissioner.", "paragraph_sentence": "In June, the advocacy group New Yorkers for Parks released a critical report comparing the management of capital projects by the parks department with that of other public agencies. While Mr. Silver questioned the fairness of some of the comparisons, he nonetheless said that the slow pace of construction would be a chief focus of his first year as commissioner. Tupper Thomas, executive director of New Yorkers for Parks, called the changes \u201ca great start.\u201d Ms. Thomas previously served as the president of the Prospect Park Alliance and the Prospect Park administrator for the parks department. In both capacities, she saw how long it took to finish projects. She said she especially approved of the idea of standardizing design for certain things, like restrooms, rather than creating each one from scratch. \u201cIt totally makes sense,\u201d she said. \u201cYou work with the guys in the technical shops who say, \u2018Don\u2019t use that flushometer; it doesn\u2019t work.\u2019 It saves time, and the plumbers know what valves to get.\u201d Others, however, are waiting for more aggressive changes, particularly in the area of procurement. No fewer than six city agencies get involved in bidding. Matthew Marienthal, an organizer for East Brooklyn Congregations, a coalition of churches and nonprofit groups, said Mr. Silver should \u201ctake the lead\u201d in reforming the procurement process, even if it meant \u201ccreating some tension\u201d with the mayor. Last month, the group invited Mr. Silver to speak to 650 residents assembled at St. Barbara\u2019s Church in Bushwick, Brooklyn. They had won pledges from the parks department last year to renovate two neighborhood spaces \u2014 Heckscher Playground and Green Central Knoll Park \u2014 and they wanted to know when the projects would be finished. Mr. Silver said that Heckscher would be done in spring 2017 and Green Central Knoll in October 2017. Work, however, has not started on either park. Adriane Williams, a leader of East Brooklyn Congregations, told Mr. Silver at the meeting, \u201cWe think a process where the most simple of fixes take three years is no process at all, just a mess.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In June, the advocacy group New Yorkers for Parks released a critical report comparing the management of capital projects by the parks department with that of other public agencies. While Mr. Silver questioned the fairness of some of the comparisons, he nonetheless said that the slow pace of construction would be a chief focus of his first year as commissioner. Tupper Thomas, executive director of New Yorkers for Parks, called the changes \u201ca great start.\u201d Ms. Thomas previously served as the president of the Prospect Park Alliance and the Prospect Park administrator for the parks department. In both capacities, she saw how long it took to finish projects. She said she especially approved of the idea of standardizing design for certain things, like restrooms, rather than creating each one from scratch. \u201cIt totally makes sense,\u201d she said. \u201cYou work with the guys in the technical shops who say, \u2018Don\u2019t use that flushometer; it doesn\u2019t work.\u2019 It saves time, and the plumbers know what valves to get.\u201d Others, however, are waiting for more aggressive changes, particularly in the area of procurement. No fewer than six city agencies get involved in bidding. Matthew Marienthal, an organizer for East Brooklyn Congregations, a coalition of churches and nonprofit groups, said Mr. Silver should \u201ctake the lead\u201d in reforming the procurement process, even if it meant \u201ccreating some tension\u201d with the mayor. Last month, the group invited Mr. Silver to speak to 650 residents assembled at St. Barbara\u2019s Church in Bushwick, Brooklyn. They had won pledges from the parks department last year to renovate two neighborhood spaces \u2014 Heckscher Playground and Green Central Knoll Park \u2014 and they wanted to know when the projects would be finished. Mr. Silver said that Heckscher would be done in spring 2017 and Green Central Knoll in October 2017. Work, however, has not started on either park. Adriane Williams, a leader of East Brooklyn Congregations, told Mr. Silver at the meeting, \u201cWe think a process where the most simple of fixes take three years is no process at all, just a mess.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "While Mr. Silver questioned the fairness of some of the comparisons, he nonetheless said that the slow pace of construction would be a chief focus of his first year as commissioner."} +{"question": "Mr. Silver was invited to speak to how many residents at the St. Barbara's Church", "paragraph": "In June, the advocacy group New Yorkers for Parks released a critical report comparing the management of capital projects by the parks department with that of other public agencies. While Mr. Silver questioned the fairness of some of the comparisons, he nonetheless said that the slow pace of construction would be a chief focus of his first year as commissioner. Tupper Thomas, executive director of New Yorkers for Parks, called the changes \u201ca great start.\u201d Ms. Thomas previously served as the president of the Prospect Park Alliance and the Prospect Park administrator for the parks department. In both capacities, she saw how long it took to finish projects. She said she especially approved of the idea of standardizing design for certain things, like restrooms, rather than creating each one from scratch. \u201cIt totally makes sense,\u201d she said. \u201cYou work with the guys in the technical shops who say, \u2018Don\u2019t use that flushometer; it doesn\u2019t work.\u2019 It saves time, and the plumbers know what valves to get.\u201d Others, however, are waiting for more aggressive changes, particularly in the area of procurement. No fewer than six city agencies get involved in bidding. Matthew Marienthal, an organizer for East Brooklyn Congregations, a coalition of churches and nonprofit groups, said Mr. Silver should \u201ctake the lead\u201d in reforming the procurement process, even if it meant \u201ccreating some tension\u201d with the mayor. Last month, the group invited Mr. Silver to speak to 650 residents assembled at St. Barbara\u2019s Church in Bushwick, Brooklyn. They had won pledges from the parks department last year to renovate two neighborhood spaces \u2014 Heckscher Playground and Green Central Knoll Park \u2014 and they wanted to know when the projects would be finished. Mr. Silver said that Heckscher would be done in spring 2017 and Green Central Knoll in October 2017. Work, however, has not started on either park. Adriane Williams, a leader of East Brooklyn Congregations, told Mr. Silver at the meeting, \u201cWe think a process where the most simple of fixes take three years is no process at all, just a mess.\u201d", "answer": "650", "sentence": "Last month, the group invited Mr. Silver to speak to 650 residents assembled at St. Barbara\u2019s Church in Bushwick, Brooklyn.", "paragraph_sentence": "In June, the advocacy group New Yorkers for Parks released a critical report comparing the management of capital projects by the parks department with that of other public agencies. While Mr. Silver questioned the fairness of some of the comparisons, he nonetheless said that the slow pace of construction would be a chief focus of his first year as commissioner. Tupper Thomas, executive director of New Yorkers for Parks, called the changes \u201ca great start.\u201d Ms. Thomas previously served as the president of the Prospect Park Alliance and the Prospect Park administrator for the parks department. In both capacities, she saw how long it took to finish projects. She said she especially approved of the idea of standardizing design for certain things, like restrooms, rather than creating each one from scratch. \u201cIt totally makes sense,\u201d she said. \u201cYou work with the guys in the technical shops who say, \u2018Don\u2019t use that flushometer; it doesn\u2019t work.\u2019 It saves time, and the plumbers know what valves to get.\u201d Others, however, are waiting for more aggressive changes, particularly in the area of procurement. No fewer than six city agencies get involved in bidding. Matthew Marienthal, an organizer for East Brooklyn Congregations, a coalition of churches and nonprofit groups, said Mr. Silver should \u201ctake the lead\u201d in reforming the procurement process, even if it meant \u201ccreating some tension\u201d with the mayor. Last month, the group invited Mr. Silver to speak to 650 residents assembled at St. Barbara\u2019s Church in Bushwick, Brooklyn. They had won pledges from the parks department last year to renovate two neighborhood spaces \u2014 Heckscher Playground and Green Central Knoll Park \u2014 and they wanted to know when the projects would be finished. Mr. Silver said that Heckscher would be done in spring 2017 and Green Central Knoll in October 2017. Work, however, has not started on either park. Adriane Williams, a leader of East Brooklyn Congregations, told Mr. Silver at the meeting, \u201cWe think a process where the most simple of fixes take three years is no process at all, just a mess.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In June, the advocacy group New Yorkers for Parks released a critical report comparing the management of capital projects by the parks department with that of other public agencies. While Mr. Silver questioned the fairness of some of the comparisons, he nonetheless said that the slow pace of construction would be a chief focus of his first year as commissioner. Tupper Thomas, executive director of New Yorkers for Parks, called the changes \u201ca great start.\u201d Ms. Thomas previously served as the president of the Prospect Park Alliance and the Prospect Park administrator for the parks department. In both capacities, she saw how long it took to finish projects. She said she especially approved of the idea of standardizing design for certain things, like restrooms, rather than creating each one from scratch. \u201cIt totally makes sense,\u201d she said. \u201cYou work with the guys in the technical shops who say, \u2018Don\u2019t use that flushometer; it doesn\u2019t work.\u2019 It saves time, and the plumbers know what valves to get.\u201d Others, however, are waiting for more aggressive changes, particularly in the area of procurement. No fewer than six city agencies get involved in bidding. Matthew Marienthal, an organizer for East Brooklyn Congregations, a coalition of churches and nonprofit groups, said Mr. Silver should \u201ctake the lead\u201d in reforming the procurement process, even if it meant \u201ccreating some tension\u201d with the mayor. Last month, the group invited Mr. Silver to speak to 650 residents assembled at St. Barbara\u2019s Church in Bushwick, Brooklyn. They had won pledges from the parks department last year to renovate two neighborhood spaces \u2014 Heckscher Playground and Green Central Knoll Park \u2014 and they wanted to know when the projects would be finished. Mr. Silver said that Heckscher would be done in spring 2017 and Green Central Knoll in October 2017. Work, however, has not started on either park. Adriane Williams, a leader of East Brooklyn Congregations, told Mr. Silver at the meeting, \u201cWe think a process where the most simple of fixes take three years is no process at all, just a mess.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Last month, the group invited Mr. Silver to speak to 650 residents assembled at St. Barbara\u2019s Church in Bushwick, Brooklyn."} +{"question": "Who is the executive director of New Yorkers for Parks?", "paragraph": "In June, the advocacy group New Yorkers for Parks released a critical report comparing the management of capital projects by the parks department with that of other public agencies. While Mr. Silver questioned the fairness of some of the comparisons, he nonetheless said that the slow pace of construction would be a chief focus of his first year as commissioner. Tupper Thomas, executive director of New Yorkers for Parks, called the changes \u201ca great start.\u201d Ms. Thomas previously served as the president of the Prospect Park Alliance and the Prospect Park administrator for the parks department. In both capacities, she saw how long it took to finish projects. She said she especially approved of the idea of standardizing design for certain things, like restrooms, rather than creating each one from scratch. \u201cIt totally makes sense,\u201d she said. \u201cYou work with the guys in the technical shops who say, \u2018Don\u2019t use that flushometer; it doesn\u2019t work.\u2019 It saves time, and the plumbers know what valves to get.\u201d Others, however, are waiting for more aggressive changes, particularly in the area of procurement. No fewer than six city agencies get involved in bidding. Matthew Marienthal, an organizer for East Brooklyn Congregations, a coalition of churches and nonprofit groups, said Mr. Silver should \u201ctake the lead\u201d in reforming the procurement process, even if it meant \u201ccreating some tension\u201d with the mayor. Last month, the group invited Mr. Silver to speak to 650 residents assembled at St. Barbara\u2019s Church in Bushwick, Brooklyn. They had won pledges from the parks department last year to renovate two neighborhood spaces \u2014 Heckscher Playground and Green Central Knoll Park \u2014 and they wanted to know when the projects would be finished. Mr. Silver said that Heckscher would be done in spring 2017 and Green Central Knoll in October 2017. Work, however, has not started on either park. Adriane Williams, a leader of East Brooklyn Congregations, told Mr. Silver at the meeting, \u201cWe think a process where the most simple of fixes take three years is no process at all, just a mess.\u201d", "answer": "Tupper Thomas", "sentence": "Tupper Thomas , executive director of New Yorkers for Parks, called the changes \u201ca great start.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "In June, the advocacy group New Yorkers for Parks released a critical report comparing the management of capital projects by the parks department with that of other public agencies. While Mr. Silver questioned the fairness of some of the comparisons, he nonetheless said that the slow pace of construction would be a chief focus of his first year as commissioner. Tupper Thomas , executive director of New Yorkers for Parks, called the changes \u201ca great start.\u201d Ms. Thomas previously served as the president of the Prospect Park Alliance and the Prospect Park administrator for the parks department. In both capacities, she saw how long it took to finish projects. She said she especially approved of the idea of standardizing design for certain things, like restrooms, rather than creating each one from scratch. \u201cIt totally makes sense,\u201d she said. \u201cYou work with the guys in the technical shops who say, \u2018Don\u2019t use that flushometer; it doesn\u2019t work.\u2019 It saves time, and the plumbers know what valves to get.\u201d Others, however, are waiting for more aggressive changes, particularly in the area of procurement. No fewer than six city agencies get involved in bidding. Matthew Marienthal, an organizer for East Brooklyn Congregations, a coalition of churches and nonprofit groups, said Mr. Silver should \u201ctake the lead\u201d in reforming the procurement process, even if it meant \u201ccreating some tension\u201d with the mayor. Last month, the group invited Mr. Silver to speak to 650 residents assembled at St. Barbara\u2019s Church in Bushwick, Brooklyn. They had won pledges from the parks department last year to renovate two neighborhood spaces \u2014 Heckscher Playground and Green Central Knoll Park \u2014 and they wanted to know when the projects would be finished. Mr. Silver said that Heckscher would be done in spring 2017 and Green Central Knoll in October 2017. Work, however, has not started on either park. Adriane Williams, a leader of East Brooklyn Congregations, told Mr. Silver at the meeting, \u201cWe think a process where the most simple of fixes take three years is no process at all, just a mess.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In June, the advocacy group New Yorkers for Parks released a critical report comparing the management of capital projects by the parks department with that of other public agencies. While Mr. Silver questioned the fairness of some of the comparisons, he nonetheless said that the slow pace of construction would be a chief focus of his first year as commissioner. Tupper Thomas , executive director of New Yorkers for Parks, called the changes \u201ca great start.\u201d Ms. Thomas previously served as the president of the Prospect Park Alliance and the Prospect Park administrator for the parks department. In both capacities, she saw how long it took to finish projects. She said she especially approved of the idea of standardizing design for certain things, like restrooms, rather than creating each one from scratch. \u201cIt totally makes sense,\u201d she said. \u201cYou work with the guys in the technical shops who say, \u2018Don\u2019t use that flushometer; it doesn\u2019t work.\u2019 It saves time, and the plumbers know what valves to get.\u201d Others, however, are waiting for more aggressive changes, particularly in the area of procurement. No fewer than six city agencies get involved in bidding. Matthew Marienthal, an organizer for East Brooklyn Congregations, a coalition of churches and nonprofit groups, said Mr. Silver should \u201ctake the lead\u201d in reforming the procurement process, even if it meant \u201ccreating some tension\u201d with the mayor. Last month, the group invited Mr. Silver to speak to 650 residents assembled at St. Barbara\u2019s Church in Bushwick, Brooklyn. They had won pledges from the parks department last year to renovate two neighborhood spaces \u2014 Heckscher Playground and Green Central Knoll Park \u2014 and they wanted to know when the projects would be finished. Mr. Silver said that Heckscher would be done in spring 2017 and Green Central Knoll in October 2017. Work, however, has not started on either park. Adriane Williams, a leader of East Brooklyn Congregations, told Mr. Silver at the meeting, \u201cWe think a process where the most simple of fixes take three years is no process at all, just a mess.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Tupper Thomas , executive director of New Yorkers for Parks, called the changes \u201ca great start.\u201d"} +{"question": "How much money was allotted towards the project in 2010?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhen we are unable to get a successful bid on a contract, that can delay a project six months to a year,\u201d Mr. Silver said. Such was the case in Councilman Brad Lander\u2019s district, in Brooklyn, where a dog run near DiMattina Playground limped along for years. Mr. Lander allotted $225,000 toward the project in 2010. When it went out to bid, however, there were no takers the first time around. The dog run, in Carroll Gardens, finally opened last summer, with new benches, fountains with spouts and a bone-shape dog pool. \u201cIt\u2019s beautiful,\u201d Mr. Lander said. Now he has his eye on another park project: the $2.75 million renovation of Dome Playground, on the border of Kensington and Borough Park. The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011; construction began last week \u2014 four years later. \u201cThis is another long saga,\u201d said Mr. Lander, who allocated money from his discretionary fund toward the renovation. \u201cBut it has picked up pace as of late.\u201d", "answer": "225,000", "sentence": "Mr. Lander allotted $ 225,000 toward the project in 2010.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhen we are unable to get a successful bid on a contract, that can delay a project six months to a year,\u201d Mr. Silver said. Such was the case in Councilman Brad Lander\u2019s district, in Brooklyn, where a dog run near DiMattina Playground limped along for years. Mr. Lander allotted $ 225,000 toward the project in 2010. When it went out to bid, however, there were no takers the first time around. The dog run, in Carroll Gardens, finally opened last summer, with new benches, fountains with spouts and a bone-shape dog pool. \u201cIt\u2019s beautiful,\u201d Mr. Lander said. Now he has his eye on another park project: the $2.75 million renovation of Dome Playground, on the border of Kensington and Borough Park. The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011; construction began last week \u2014 four years later. \u201cThis is another long saga,\u201d said Mr. Lander, who allocated money from his discretionary fund toward the renovation. \u201cBut it has picked up pace as of late.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhen we are unable to get a successful bid on a contract, that can delay a project six months to a year,\u201d Mr. Silver said. Such was the case in Councilman Brad Lander\u2019s district, in Brooklyn, where a dog run near DiMattina Playground limped along for years. Mr. Lander allotted $ 225,000 toward the project in 2010. When it went out to bid, however, there were no takers the first time around. The dog run, in Carroll Gardens, finally opened last summer, with new benches, fountains with spouts and a bone-shape dog pool. \u201cIt\u2019s beautiful,\u201d Mr. Lander said. Now he has his eye on another park project: the $2.75 million renovation of Dome Playground, on the border of Kensington and Borough Park. The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011; construction began last week \u2014 four years later. \u201cThis is another long saga,\u201d said Mr. Lander, who allocated money from his discretionary fund toward the renovation. \u201cBut it has picked up pace as of late.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Lander allotted $ 225,000 toward the project in 2010."} +{"question": "The dog run that finally opened last summer was where?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhen we are unable to get a successful bid on a contract, that can delay a project six months to a year,\u201d Mr. Silver said. Such was the case in Councilman Brad Lander\u2019s district, in Brooklyn, where a dog run near DiMattina Playground limped along for years. Mr. Lander allotted $225,000 toward the project in 2010. When it went out to bid, however, there were no takers the first time around. The dog run, in Carroll Gardens, finally opened last summer, with new benches, fountains with spouts and a bone-shape dog pool. \u201cIt\u2019s beautiful,\u201d Mr. Lander said. Now he has his eye on another park project: the $2.75 million renovation of Dome Playground, on the border of Kensington and Borough Park. The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011; construction began last week \u2014 four years later. \u201cThis is another long saga,\u201d said Mr. Lander, who allocated money from his discretionary fund toward the renovation. \u201cBut it has picked up pace as of late.\u201d", "answer": "Carroll Gardens", "sentence": "The dog run, in Carroll Gardens , finally opened last summer, with new benches, fountains with spouts and a bone-shape dog pool.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhen we are unable to get a successful bid on a contract, that can delay a project six months to a year,\u201d Mr. Silver said. Such was the case in Councilman Brad Lander\u2019s district, in Brooklyn, where a dog run near DiMattina Playground limped along for years. Mr. Lander allotted $225,000 toward the project in 2010. When it went out to bid, however, there were no takers the first time around. The dog run, in Carroll Gardens , finally opened last summer, with new benches, fountains with spouts and a bone-shape dog pool. \u201cIt\u2019s beautiful,\u201d Mr. Lander said. Now he has his eye on another park project: the $2.75 million renovation of Dome Playground, on the border of Kensington and Borough Park. The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011; construction began last week \u2014 four years later. \u201cThis is another long saga,\u201d said Mr. Lander, who allocated money from his discretionary fund toward the renovation. \u201cBut it has picked up pace as of late.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhen we are unable to get a successful bid on a contract, that can delay a project six months to a year,\u201d Mr. Silver said. Such was the case in Councilman Brad Lander\u2019s district, in Brooklyn, where a dog run near DiMattina Playground limped along for years. Mr. Lander allotted $225,000 toward the project in 2010. When it went out to bid, however, there were no takers the first time around. The dog run, in Carroll Gardens , finally opened last summer, with new benches, fountains with spouts and a bone-shape dog pool. \u201cIt\u2019s beautiful,\u201d Mr. Lander said. Now he has his eye on another park project: the $2.75 million renovation of Dome Playground, on the border of Kensington and Borough Park. The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011; construction began last week \u2014 four years later. \u201cThis is another long saga,\u201d said Mr. Lander, who allocated money from his discretionary fund toward the renovation. \u201cBut it has picked up pace as of late.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The dog run, in Carroll Gardens , finally opened last summer, with new benches, fountains with spouts and a bone-shape dog pool."} +{"question": "What near DiMattina Playground limped along for years?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhen we are unable to get a successful bid on a contract, that can delay a project six months to a year,\u201d Mr. Silver said. Such was the case in Councilman Brad Lander\u2019s district, in Brooklyn, where a dog run near DiMattina Playground limped along for years. Mr. Lander allotted $225,000 toward the project in 2010. When it went out to bid, however, there were no takers the first time around. The dog run, in Carroll Gardens, finally opened last summer, with new benches, fountains with spouts and a bone-shape dog pool. \u201cIt\u2019s beautiful,\u201d Mr. Lander said. Now he has his eye on another park project: the $2.75 million renovation of Dome Playground, on the border of Kensington and Borough Park. The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011; construction began last week \u2014 four years later. \u201cThis is another long saga,\u201d said Mr. Lander, who allocated money from his discretionary fund toward the renovation. \u201cBut it has picked up pace as of late.\u201d", "answer": "a dog run", "sentence": "Such was the case in Councilman Brad Lander\u2019s district, in Brooklyn, where a dog run near DiMattina Playground limped along for years.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhen we are unable to get a successful bid on a contract, that can delay a project six months to a year,\u201d Mr. Silver said. Such was the case in Councilman Brad Lander\u2019s district, in Brooklyn, where a dog run near DiMattina Playground limped along for years. Mr. Lander allotted $225,000 toward the project in 2010. When it went out to bid, however, there were no takers the first time around. The dog run, in Carroll Gardens, finally opened last summer, with new benches, fountains with spouts and a bone-shape dog pool. \u201cIt\u2019s beautiful,\u201d Mr. Lander said. Now he has his eye on another park project: the $2.75 million renovation of Dome Playground, on the border of Kensington and Borough Park. The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011; construction began last week \u2014 four years later. \u201cThis is another long saga,\u201d said Mr. Lander, who allocated money from his discretionary fund toward the renovation. \u201cBut it has picked up pace as of late.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhen we are unable to get a successful bid on a contract, that can delay a project six months to a year,\u201d Mr. Silver said. Such was the case in Councilman Brad Lander\u2019s district, in Brooklyn, where a dog run near DiMattina Playground limped along for years. Mr. Lander allotted $225,000 toward the project in 2010. When it went out to bid, however, there were no takers the first time around. The dog run, in Carroll Gardens, finally opened last summer, with new benches, fountains with spouts and a bone-shape dog pool. \u201cIt\u2019s beautiful,\u201d Mr. Lander said. Now he has his eye on another park project: the $2.75 million renovation of Dome Playground, on the border of Kensington and Borough Park. The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011; construction began last week \u2014 four years later. \u201cThis is another long saga,\u201d said Mr. Lander, who allocated money from his discretionary fund toward the renovation. \u201cBut it has picked up pace as of late.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Such was the case in Councilman Brad Lander\u2019s district, in Brooklyn, where a dog run near DiMattina Playground limped along for years."} +{"question": "How much will the renovations of Dome Playground cost?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhen we are unable to get a successful bid on a contract, that can delay a project six months to a year,\u201d Mr. Silver said. Such was the case in Councilman Brad Lander\u2019s district, in Brooklyn, where a dog run near DiMattina Playground limped along for years. Mr. Lander allotted $225,000 toward the project in 2010. When it went out to bid, however, there were no takers the first time around. The dog run, in Carroll Gardens, finally opened last summer, with new benches, fountains with spouts and a bone-shape dog pool. \u201cIt\u2019s beautiful,\u201d Mr. Lander said. Now he has his eye on another park project: the $2.75 million renovation of Dome Playground, on the border of Kensington and Borough Park. The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011; construction began last week \u2014 four years later. \u201cThis is another long saga,\u201d said Mr. Lander, who allocated money from his discretionary fund toward the renovation. \u201cBut it has picked up pace as of late.\u201d", "answer": "2.75 million", "sentence": "Now he has his eye on another park project: the $ 2.75 million renovation of Dome Playground, on the border of Kensington and Borough Park.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhen we are unable to get a successful bid on a contract, that can delay a project six months to a year,\u201d Mr. Silver said. Such was the case in Councilman Brad Lander\u2019s district, in Brooklyn, where a dog run near DiMattina Playground limped along for years. Mr. Lander allotted $225,000 toward the project in 2010. When it went out to bid, however, there were no takers the first time around. The dog run, in Carroll Gardens, finally opened last summer, with new benches, fountains with spouts and a bone-shape dog pool. \u201cIt\u2019s beautiful,\u201d Mr. Lander said. Now he has his eye on another park project: the $ 2.75 million renovation of Dome Playground, on the border of Kensington and Borough Park. The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011; construction began last week \u2014 four years later. \u201cThis is another long saga,\u201d said Mr. Lander, who allocated money from his discretionary fund toward the renovation. \u201cBut it has picked up pace as of late.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhen we are unable to get a successful bid on a contract, that can delay a project six months to a year,\u201d Mr. Silver said. Such was the case in Councilman Brad Lander\u2019s district, in Brooklyn, where a dog run near DiMattina Playground limped along for years. Mr. Lander allotted $225,000 toward the project in 2010. When it went out to bid, however, there were no takers the first time around. The dog run, in Carroll Gardens, finally opened last summer, with new benches, fountains with spouts and a bone-shape dog pool. \u201cIt\u2019s beautiful,\u201d Mr. Lander said. Now he has his eye on another park project: the $ 2.75 million renovation of Dome Playground, on the border of Kensington and Borough Park. The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011; construction began last week \u2014 four years later. \u201cThis is another long saga,\u201d said Mr. Lander, who allocated money from his discretionary fund toward the renovation. \u201cBut it has picked up pace as of late.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Now he has his eye on another park project: the $ 2.75 million renovation of Dome Playground, on the border of Kensington and Borough Park."} +{"question": "What year did the parks department hold a meeting for ideas about the Dome Playground?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhen we are unable to get a successful bid on a contract, that can delay a project six months to a year,\u201d Mr. Silver said. Such was the case in Councilman Brad Lander\u2019s district, in Brooklyn, where a dog run near DiMattina Playground limped along for years. Mr. Lander allotted $225,000 toward the project in 2010. When it went out to bid, however, there were no takers the first time around. The dog run, in Carroll Gardens, finally opened last summer, with new benches, fountains with spouts and a bone-shape dog pool. \u201cIt\u2019s beautiful,\u201d Mr. Lander said. Now he has his eye on another park project: the $2.75 million renovation of Dome Playground, on the border of Kensington and Borough Park. The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011; construction began last week \u2014 four years later. \u201cThis is another long saga,\u201d said Mr. Lander, who allocated money from his discretionary fund toward the renovation. \u201cBut it has picked up pace as of late.\u201d", "answer": "2011", "sentence": "The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011 ; construction began last week \u2014 four years later.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhen we are unable to get a successful bid on a contract, that can delay a project six months to a year,\u201d Mr. Silver said. Such was the case in Councilman Brad Lander\u2019s district, in Brooklyn, where a dog run near DiMattina Playground limped along for years. Mr. Lander allotted $225,000 toward the project in 2010. When it went out to bid, however, there were no takers the first time around. The dog run, in Carroll Gardens, finally opened last summer, with new benches, fountains with spouts and a bone-shape dog pool. \u201cIt\u2019s beautiful,\u201d Mr. Lander said. Now he has his eye on another park project: the $2.75 million renovation of Dome Playground, on the border of Kensington and Borough Park. The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011 ; construction began last week \u2014 four years later. \u201cThis is another long saga,\u201d said Mr. Lander, who allocated money from his discretionary fund toward the renovation. \u201cBut it has picked up pace as of late.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhen we are unable to get a successful bid on a contract, that can delay a project six months to a year,\u201d Mr. Silver said. Such was the case in Councilman Brad Lander\u2019s district, in Brooklyn, where a dog run near DiMattina Playground limped along for years. Mr. Lander allotted $225,000 toward the project in 2010. When it went out to bid, however, there were no takers the first time around. The dog run, in Carroll Gardens, finally opened last summer, with new benches, fountains with spouts and a bone-shape dog pool. \u201cIt\u2019s beautiful,\u201d Mr. Lander said. Now he has his eye on another park project: the $2.75 million renovation of Dome Playground, on the border of Kensington and Borough Park. The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011 ; construction began last week \u2014 four years later. \u201cThis is another long saga,\u201d said Mr. Lander, who allocated money from his discretionary fund toward the renovation. \u201cBut it has picked up pace as of late.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The parks department held a meeting to solicit ideas in early 2011 ; construction began last week \u2014 four years later."} +{"question": "What is the name of the terrorist group that struck across Nigeria's border into the Niger for the first time on Friday?", "paragraph": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "answer": "Boko Haram", "sentence": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "paragraph_sentence": " DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa. ", "paragraph_answer": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "sentence_answer": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa."} +{"question": "On what day of the week did the terrorist group Boko Haram strike across Nigeria's border into Niger for the first time?", "paragraph": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "answer": "Friday", "sentence": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "paragraph_sentence": " DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa. ", "paragraph_answer": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "sentence_answer": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa."} +{"question": "Where did the Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram strike?", "paragraph": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "answer": "across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger", "sentence": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "paragraph_sentence": " DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa. ", "paragraph_answer": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "sentence_answer": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa."} +{"question": "Where is Nigeria located?", "paragraph": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "answer": "West Africa", "sentence": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa .", "paragraph_sentence": " DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa . ", "paragraph_answer": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa .", "sentence_answer": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa ."} +{"question": "What religious group is the terrorist group Boko Haram associated with?", "paragraph": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "answer": "Islamist", "sentence": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "paragraph_sentence": " DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa. ", "paragraph_answer": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa.", "sentence_answer": "DAKAR, Senegal \u2014 The Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram on Friday morning struck across Nigeria\u2019s border into Niger for the first time, broadening the regional conflict to a fourth country in West Africa."} +{"question": "Which river did the Boko Haram fighters cross to attack Bosso?", "paragraph": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed. Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "answer": "Komadougou River", "sentence": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict.", "paragraph_sentence": " Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed. Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "paragraph_answer": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed. Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "sentence_answer": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict."} +{"question": "Which city did the Boko Haram attack after crossing the Komadougou River?", "paragraph": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed. Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "answer": "Bosso", "sentence": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso , a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict.", "paragraph_sentence": " Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso , a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed. Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "paragraph_answer": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso , a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed. Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "sentence_answer": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso , a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict."} +{"question": "Where is the city of Bosso located?", "paragraph": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed. Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "answer": "Nigeria", "sentence": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict.", "paragraph_sentence": " Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed. Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "paragraph_answer": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed. Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "sentence_answer": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict."} +{"question": "How long did it take to push the Boko Haram fighters back from Bosso?", "paragraph": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed. Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "answer": "three hours", "sentence": "An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat.", "paragraph_sentence": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed. Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "paragraph_answer": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed. Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "sentence_answer": "An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat."} +{"question": "What happened to the Boko Haram fighters who attacked Bosso?", "paragraph": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed. Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "answer": "all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed", "sentence": "Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed .", "paragraph_sentence": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed . Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "paragraph_answer": "Boko Haram fighters crossed the Komadougou River separating Nigeria from Niger and attacked Bosso, a remote town that is a local seat of government with an open-air market that has been sheltering thousands of refugees from the conflict. An army officer in Niger said the fighters were pushed back after at least three hours of combat. Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed . Other Niger government officials could not be reached on Friday afternoon, and phone lines to Bosso, on Niger\u2019s eastern edge, were not working.", "sentence_answer": "Speaking from Niamey, the capital, the officer said all the Boko Haram fighters who entered Bosso were killed ."} +{"question": "Was the army officer who described the Bosso attack authorized to speak publicly?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe are in control of the situation,\u201d said the army officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. \u201cAnybody who entered the town, nobody came out alive,\u201d the officer said. He would not say whether any troops or any civilians in Bosso had been killed. \u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home.\u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram. An army detachment is always posted at the river\u2019s shallowest point, which can be easily crossed. Last week, officials in Bosso said they could hear Chadian planes bomb Boko Haram positions across the frontier. Niger\u2019s Parliament is scheduled to vote Monday on whether the country\u2019s troops will join those of Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad to take on the insurgents. Chad\u2019s troops have had notable successes over the past week in confronting Boko Haram along the Cameroon border, retaking at least one Nigerian town. But the extension of the fighting to Niger is a new phase in the war on Boko Haram. Wary of being drawn into the fight, Niger\u2019s government has been careful so far not to provoke the Islamists. Some analysts believe that the Islamists have heavily infiltrated Diffa, a regional capital in the country\u2019s far east.", "answer": "he was not authorized to speak publicly", "sentence": "\u201cWe are in control of the situation,\u201d said the army officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cWe are in control of the situation,\u201d said the army officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly . \u201cAnybody who entered the town, nobody came out alive,\u201d the officer said. He would not say whether any troops or any civilians in Bosso had been killed. \u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home.\u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram. An army detachment is always posted at the river\u2019s shallowest point, which can be easily crossed. Last week, officials in Bosso said they could hear Chadian planes bomb Boko Haram positions across the frontier. Niger\u2019s Parliament is scheduled to vote Monday on whether the country\u2019s troops will join those of Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad to take on the insurgents. Chad\u2019s troops have had notable successes over the past week in confronting Boko Haram along the Cameroon border, retaking at least one Nigerian town. But the extension of the fighting to Niger is a new phase in the war on Boko Haram. Wary of being drawn into the fight, Niger\u2019s government has been careful so far not to provoke the Islamists. Some analysts believe that the Islamists have heavily infiltrated Diffa, a regional capital in the country\u2019s far east.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe are in control of the situation,\u201d said the army officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly . \u201cAnybody who entered the town, nobody came out alive,\u201d the officer said. He would not say whether any troops or any civilians in Bosso had been killed. \u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home.\u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram. An army detachment is always posted at the river\u2019s shallowest point, which can be easily crossed. Last week, officials in Bosso said they could hear Chadian planes bomb Boko Haram positions across the frontier. Niger\u2019s Parliament is scheduled to vote Monday on whether the country\u2019s troops will join those of Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad to take on the insurgents. Chad\u2019s troops have had notable successes over the past week in confronting Boko Haram along the Cameroon border, retaking at least one Nigerian town. But the extension of the fighting to Niger is a new phase in the war on Boko Haram. Wary of being drawn into the fight, Niger\u2019s government has been careful so far not to provoke the Islamists. Some analysts believe that the Islamists have heavily infiltrated Diffa, a regional capital in the country\u2019s far east.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe are in control of the situation,\u201d said the army officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly ."} +{"question": "What did the people of Bosso hear?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe are in control of the situation,\u201d said the army officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. \u201cAnybody who entered the town, nobody came out alive,\u201d the officer said. He would not say whether any troops or any civilians in Bosso had been killed. \u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home.\u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram. An army detachment is always posted at the river\u2019s shallowest point, which can be easily crossed. Last week, officials in Bosso said they could hear Chadian planes bomb Boko Haram positions across the frontier. Niger\u2019s Parliament is scheduled to vote Monday on whether the country\u2019s troops will join those of Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad to take on the insurgents. Chad\u2019s troops have had notable successes over the past week in confronting Boko Haram along the Cameroon border, retaking at least one Nigerian town. But the extension of the fighting to Niger is a new phase in the war on Boko Haram. Wary of being drawn into the fight, Niger\u2019s government has been careful so far not to provoke the Islamists. Some analysts believe that the Islamists have heavily infiltrated Diffa, a regional capital in the country\u2019s far east.", "answer": "gunfire", "sentence": "\u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe are in control of the situation,\u201d said the army officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. \u201cAnybody who entered the town, nobody came out alive,\u201d the officer said. He would not say whether any troops or any civilians in Bosso had been killed. \u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home.\u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram. An army detachment is always posted at the river\u2019s shallowest point, which can be easily crossed. Last week, officials in Bosso said they could hear Chadian planes bomb Boko Haram positions across the frontier. Niger\u2019s Parliament is scheduled to vote Monday on whether the country\u2019s troops will join those of Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad to take on the insurgents. Chad\u2019s troops have had notable successes over the past week in confronting Boko Haram along the Cameroon border, retaking at least one Nigerian town. But the extension of the fighting to Niger is a new phase in the war on Boko Haram. Wary of being drawn into the fight, Niger\u2019s government has been careful so far not to provoke the Islamists. Some analysts believe that the Islamists have heavily infiltrated Diffa, a regional capital in the country\u2019s far east.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe are in control of the situation,\u201d said the army officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. \u201cAnybody who entered the town, nobody came out alive,\u201d the officer said. He would not say whether any troops or any civilians in Bosso had been killed. \u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home.\u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram. An army detachment is always posted at the river\u2019s shallowest point, which can be easily crossed. Last week, officials in Bosso said they could hear Chadian planes bomb Boko Haram positions across the frontier. Niger\u2019s Parliament is scheduled to vote Monday on whether the country\u2019s troops will join those of Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad to take on the insurgents. Chad\u2019s troops have had notable successes over the past week in confronting Boko Haram along the Cameroon border, retaking at least one Nigerian town. But the extension of the fighting to Niger is a new phase in the war on Boko Haram. Wary of being drawn into the fight, Niger\u2019s government has been careful so far not to provoke the Islamists. Some analysts believe that the Islamists have heavily infiltrated Diffa, a regional capital in the country\u2019s far east.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home.\u201d"} +{"question": "Did any of the Boko Haram who entered the town to attack Bosso survive?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe are in control of the situation,\u201d said the army officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. \u201cAnybody who entered the town, nobody came out alive,\u201d the officer said. He would not say whether any troops or any civilians in Bosso had been killed. \u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home.\u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram. An army detachment is always posted at the river\u2019s shallowest point, which can be easily crossed. Last week, officials in Bosso said they could hear Chadian planes bomb Boko Haram positions across the frontier. Niger\u2019s Parliament is scheduled to vote Monday on whether the country\u2019s troops will join those of Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad to take on the insurgents. Chad\u2019s troops have had notable successes over the past week in confronting Boko Haram along the Cameroon border, retaking at least one Nigerian town. But the extension of the fighting to Niger is a new phase in the war on Boko Haram. Wary of being drawn into the fight, Niger\u2019s government has been careful so far not to provoke the Islamists. Some analysts believe that the Islamists have heavily infiltrated Diffa, a regional capital in the country\u2019s far east.", "answer": "nobody came out alive", "sentence": "\u201cAnybody who entered the town, nobody came out alive ,\u201d the officer said.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe are in control of the situation,\u201d said the army officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. \u201cAnybody who entered the town, nobody came out alive ,\u201d the officer said. He would not say whether any troops or any civilians in Bosso had been killed. \u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home.\u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram. An army detachment is always posted at the river\u2019s shallowest point, which can be easily crossed. Last week, officials in Bosso said they could hear Chadian planes bomb Boko Haram positions across the frontier. Niger\u2019s Parliament is scheduled to vote Monday on whether the country\u2019s troops will join those of Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad to take on the insurgents. Chad\u2019s troops have had notable successes over the past week in confronting Boko Haram along the Cameroon border, retaking at least one Nigerian town. But the extension of the fighting to Niger is a new phase in the war on Boko Haram. Wary of being drawn into the fight, Niger\u2019s government has been careful so far not to provoke the Islamists. Some analysts believe that the Islamists have heavily infiltrated Diffa, a regional capital in the country\u2019s far east.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe are in control of the situation,\u201d said the army officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. \u201cAnybody who entered the town, nobody came out alive ,\u201d the officer said. He would not say whether any troops or any civilians in Bosso had been killed. \u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home.\u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram. An army detachment is always posted at the river\u2019s shallowest point, which can be easily crossed. Last week, officials in Bosso said they could hear Chadian planes bomb Boko Haram positions across the frontier. Niger\u2019s Parliament is scheduled to vote Monday on whether the country\u2019s troops will join those of Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad to take on the insurgents. Chad\u2019s troops have had notable successes over the past week in confronting Boko Haram along the Cameroon border, retaking at least one Nigerian town. But the extension of the fighting to Niger is a new phase in the war on Boko Haram. Wary of being drawn into the fight, Niger\u2019s government has been careful so far not to provoke the Islamists. Some analysts believe that the Islamists have heavily infiltrated Diffa, a regional capital in the country\u2019s far east.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cAnybody who entered the town, nobody came out alive ,\u201d the officer said."} +{"question": "What did the people of Bosso do when they heard gunfire?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe are in control of the situation,\u201d said the army officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. \u201cAnybody who entered the town, nobody came out alive,\u201d the officer said. He would not say whether any troops or any civilians in Bosso had been killed. \u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home.\u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram. An army detachment is always posted at the river\u2019s shallowest point, which can be easily crossed. Last week, officials in Bosso said they could hear Chadian planes bomb Boko Haram positions across the frontier. Niger\u2019s Parliament is scheduled to vote Monday on whether the country\u2019s troops will join those of Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad to take on the insurgents. Chad\u2019s troops have had notable successes over the past week in confronting Boko Haram along the Cameroon border, retaking at least one Nigerian town. But the extension of the fighting to Niger is a new phase in the war on Boko Haram. Wary of being drawn into the fight, Niger\u2019s government has been careful so far not to provoke the Islamists. Some analysts believe that the Islamists have heavily infiltrated Diffa, a regional capital in the country\u2019s far east.", "answer": "went home.", "sentence": "\u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home. \u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe are in control of the situation,\u201d said the army officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. \u201cAnybody who entered the town, nobody came out alive,\u201d the officer said. He would not say whether any troops or any civilians in Bosso had been killed. \u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home. \u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram. An army detachment is always posted at the river\u2019s shallowest point, which can be easily crossed. Last week, officials in Bosso said they could hear Chadian planes bomb Boko Haram positions across the frontier. Niger\u2019s Parliament is scheduled to vote Monday on whether the country\u2019s troops will join those of Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad to take on the insurgents. Chad\u2019s troops have had notable successes over the past week in confronting Boko Haram along the Cameroon border, retaking at least one Nigerian town. But the extension of the fighting to Niger is a new phase in the war on Boko Haram. Wary of being drawn into the fight, Niger\u2019s government has been careful so far not to provoke the Islamists. Some analysts believe that the Islamists have heavily infiltrated Diffa, a regional capital in the country\u2019s far east.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe are in control of the situation,\u201d said the army officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. \u201cAnybody who entered the town, nobody came out alive,\u201d the officer said. He would not say whether any troops or any civilians in Bosso had been killed. \u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home. \u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram. An army detachment is always posted at the river\u2019s shallowest point, which can be easily crossed. Last week, officials in Bosso said they could hear Chadian planes bomb Boko Haram positions across the frontier. Niger\u2019s Parliament is scheduled to vote Monday on whether the country\u2019s troops will join those of Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad to take on the insurgents. Chad\u2019s troops have had notable successes over the past week in confronting Boko Haram along the Cameroon border, retaking at least one Nigerian town. But the extension of the fighting to Niger is a new phase in the war on Boko Haram. Wary of being drawn into the fight, Niger\u2019s government has been careful so far not to provoke the Islamists. Some analysts believe that the Islamists have heavily infiltrated Diffa, a regional capital in the country\u2019s far east.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home. \u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram."} +{"question": "Where are Bosso army detachments posted?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe are in control of the situation,\u201d said the army officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. \u201cAnybody who entered the town, nobody came out alive,\u201d the officer said. He would not say whether any troops or any civilians in Bosso had been killed. \u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home.\u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram. An army detachment is always posted at the river\u2019s shallowest point, which can be easily crossed. Last week, officials in Bosso said they could hear Chadian planes bomb Boko Haram positions across the frontier. Niger\u2019s Parliament is scheduled to vote Monday on whether the country\u2019s troops will join those of Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad to take on the insurgents. Chad\u2019s troops have had notable successes over the past week in confronting Boko Haram along the Cameroon border, retaking at least one Nigerian town. But the extension of the fighting to Niger is a new phase in the war on Boko Haram. Wary of being drawn into the fight, Niger\u2019s government has been careful so far not to provoke the Islamists. Some analysts believe that the Islamists have heavily infiltrated Diffa, a regional capital in the country\u2019s far east.", "answer": "at the river\u2019s shallowest point,", "sentence": "An army detachment is always posted at the river\u2019s shallowest point, which can be easily crossed.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe are in control of the situation,\u201d said the army officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. \u201cAnybody who entered the town, nobody came out alive,\u201d the officer said. He would not say whether any troops or any civilians in Bosso had been killed. \u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home.\u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram. An army detachment is always posted at the river\u2019s shallowest point, which can be easily crossed. Last week, officials in Bosso said they could hear Chadian planes bomb Boko Haram positions across the frontier. Niger\u2019s Parliament is scheduled to vote Monday on whether the country\u2019s troops will join those of Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad to take on the insurgents. Chad\u2019s troops have had notable successes over the past week in confronting Boko Haram along the Cameroon border, retaking at least one Nigerian town. But the extension of the fighting to Niger is a new phase in the war on Boko Haram. Wary of being drawn into the fight, Niger\u2019s government has been careful so far not to provoke the Islamists. Some analysts believe that the Islamists have heavily infiltrated Diffa, a regional capital in the country\u2019s far east.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe are in control of the situation,\u201d said the army officer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. \u201cAnybody who entered the town, nobody came out alive,\u201d the officer said. He would not say whether any troops or any civilians in Bosso had been killed. \u201cPeople heard gunfire and went home.\u201d Niger\u2019s army has troops based in Bosso, at the edge of the area of recent fighting with Boko Haram. An army detachment is always posted at the river\u2019s shallowest point, which can be easily crossed. Last week, officials in Bosso said they could hear Chadian planes bomb Boko Haram positions across the frontier. Niger\u2019s Parliament is scheduled to vote Monday on whether the country\u2019s troops will join those of Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad to take on the insurgents. Chad\u2019s troops have had notable successes over the past week in confronting Boko Haram along the Cameroon border, retaking at least one Nigerian town. But the extension of the fighting to Niger is a new phase in the war on Boko Haram. Wary of being drawn into the fight, Niger\u2019s government has been careful so far not to provoke the Islamists. Some analysts believe that the Islamists have heavily infiltrated Diffa, a regional capital in the country\u2019s far east.", "sentence_answer": "An army detachment is always posted at the river\u2019s shallowest point, which can be easily crossed."} +{"question": "What do a lot of buyers prefer to use the extra mantel space for?", "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": "built-in bookshelves", "sentence": "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 .", "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": "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 ."} +{"question": "What do you usually design a room around?", "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": "The mantel", "sentence": "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. \u201c The mantel serves as a center-point of the home, and you usually design a room around it,\u201d said Joan Enger, owner of J. Patryce Design, in Hoboken, N.J.", "paragraph_sentence": "Q. Our fireplace surround is outdated brick. Should we replace it before selling? A. \u201cMost people like the idea of a fireplace, even if they barely use it,\u201d said Sandra Smith, a real estate salesperson at Compass, in Manhattan. So \u201ca fireplace brings value to a property.\u201d But whether it\u2019s worth spending the time and money to update the surround on your fireplace depends on a number of factors, she said. If your whole home is in need of renovation, changing the surround is unlikely to make much of a difference in buyers\u2019 eyes. And if the fireplace is nonfunctional, \u201cyou should take that into account in determining how much you want to invest,\u201d Ms. Smith said, because some buyers may prefer to use the space for something else, like built-in bookshelves. However, if the rest of your home is in good shape and has an up-to-date look, and you have a working fireplace, an outdated surround needs attention. \u201c The 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. \u201c The 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": "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. \u201c The 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."} +{"question": "What business in Manhatten does Ms. Smith work for?", "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": "Compass", "sentence": "\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.", "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": "\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."} +{"question": "What does Joan Enger have to do with J. Patryce Design?", "paragraph": "Q. Our fireplace surround is outdated brick. Should we replace it before selling? A. \u201cMost people like the idea of a fireplace, even if they barely use it,\u201d said Sandra Smith, a real estate salesperson at Compass, in Manhattan. So \u201ca fireplace brings value to a property.\u201d But whether it\u2019s worth spending the time and money to update the surround on your fireplace depends on a number of factors, she said. If your whole home is in need of renovation, changing the surround is unlikely to make much of a difference in buyers\u2019 eyes. And if the fireplace is nonfunctional, \u201cyou should take that into account in determining how much you want to invest,\u201d Ms. Smith said, because some buyers may prefer to use the space for something else, like built-in bookshelves. However, if the rest of your home is in good shape and has an up-to-date look, and you have a working fireplace, an outdated surround needs attention. \u201cThe mantel serves as a center-point of the home, and you usually design a room around it,\u201d said Joan Enger, owner of J. Patryce Design, in Hoboken, N.J. \u201cSo it has to be right.\u201d", "answer": "owner", "sentence": "\u201cThe mantel serves as a center-point of the home, and you usually design a room around it,\u201d said Joan Enger, owner of J. Patryce Design, in Hoboken, N.J.", "paragraph_sentence": "Q. Our fireplace surround is outdated brick. Should we replace it before selling? A. \u201cMost people like the idea of a fireplace, even if they barely use it,\u201d said Sandra Smith, a real estate salesperson at Compass, in Manhattan. So \u201ca fireplace brings value to a property.\u201d But whether it\u2019s worth spending the time and money to update the surround on your fireplace depends on a number of factors, she said. If your whole home is in need of renovation, changing the surround is unlikely to make much of a difference in buyers\u2019 eyes. And if the fireplace is nonfunctional, \u201cyou should take that into account in determining how much you want to invest,\u201d Ms. Smith said, because some buyers may prefer to use the space for something else, like built-in bookshelves. However, if the rest of your home is in good shape and has an up-to-date look, and you have a working fireplace, an outdated surround needs attention. \u201cThe mantel serves as a center-point of the home, and you usually design a room around it,\u201d said Joan Enger, owner of J. Patryce Design, in Hoboken, N.J. \u201cSo it has to be right.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Q. Our fireplace surround is outdated brick. Should we replace it before selling? A. \u201cMost people like the idea of a fireplace, even if they barely use it,\u201d said Sandra Smith, a real estate salesperson at Compass, in Manhattan. So \u201ca fireplace brings value to a property.\u201d But whether it\u2019s worth spending the time and money to update the surround on your fireplace depends on a number of factors, she said. If your whole home is in need of renovation, changing the surround is unlikely to make much of a difference in buyers\u2019 eyes. And if the fireplace is nonfunctional, \u201cyou should take that into account in determining how much you want to invest,\u201d Ms. Smith said, because some buyers may prefer to use the space for something else, like built-in bookshelves. However, if the rest of your home is in good shape and has an up-to-date look, and you have a working fireplace, an outdated surround needs attention. \u201cThe mantel serves as a center-point of the home, and you usually design a room around it,\u201d said Joan Enger, owner of J. Patryce Design, in Hoboken, N.J. \u201cSo it has to be right.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe mantel serves as a center-point of the home, and you usually design a room around it,\u201d said Joan Enger, owner of J. Patryce Design, in Hoboken, N.J."} +{"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"} +{"question": "What month did the husband of Ms. Enger help sell the house?", "paragraph": "Ms. Enger recommended using a \u201cclean and simple\u201d design that would appeal to both modern and traditional tastes. \u201cMost people today don\u2019t want anything too fussy,\u201d she said. It\u2019s also important to be aware of how the original surround was built. Many surrounds are made from brick veneer that is just stuck onto the wall, Ms. Enger said, and they can be removed relatively easily and replaced. But if the brick is an integral part of the wall, a cover-up job may be required. If you\u2019re aiming for all-out luxury, you might consider installing a custom stone surround. Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features. \u201cIt was something that everyone \u2013 realtors, potential buyers and friends \u2013 loved,\u201d she said. Just be aware, she added, that \u201cit\u2019s definitely more pricey than wood or paint.\u201d", "answer": "May", "sentence": "Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May , she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Enger recommended using a \u201cclean and simple\u201d design that would appeal to both modern and traditional tastes. \u201cMost people today don\u2019t want anything too fussy,\u201d she said. It\u2019s also important to be aware of how the original surround was built. Many surrounds are made from brick veneer that is just stuck onto the wall, Ms. Enger said, and they can be removed relatively easily and replaced. But if the brick is an integral part of the wall, a cover-up job may be required. If you\u2019re aiming for all-out luxury, you might consider installing a custom stone surround. Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May , she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features. \u201cIt was something that everyone \u2013 realtors, potential buyers and friends \u2013 loved,\u201d she said. Just be aware, she added, that \u201cit\u2019s definitely more pricey than wood or paint.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Enger recommended using a \u201cclean and simple\u201d design that would appeal to both modern and traditional tastes. \u201cMost people today don\u2019t want anything too fussy,\u201d she said. It\u2019s also important to be aware of how the original surround was built. Many surrounds are made from brick veneer that is just stuck onto the wall, Ms. Enger said, and they can be removed relatively easily and replaced. But if the brick is an integral part of the wall, a cover-up job may be required. If you\u2019re aiming for all-out luxury, you might consider installing a custom stone surround. Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May , she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features. \u201cIt was something that everyone \u2013 realtors, potential buyers and friends \u2013 loved,\u201d she said. Just be aware, she added, that \u201cit\u2019s definitely more pricey than wood or paint.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May , she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features."} +{"question": "What material did Ms. Enger build a mantel out of?", "paragraph": "Ms. Enger recommended using a \u201cclean and simple\u201d design that would appeal to both modern and traditional tastes. \u201cMost people today don\u2019t want anything too fussy,\u201d she said. It\u2019s also important to be aware of how the original surround was built. Many surrounds are made from brick veneer that is just stuck onto the wall, Ms. Enger said, and they can be removed relatively easily and replaced. But if the brick is an integral part of the wall, a cover-up job may be required. If you\u2019re aiming for all-out luxury, you might consider installing a custom stone surround. Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features. \u201cIt was something that everyone \u2013 realtors, potential buyers and friends \u2013 loved,\u201d she said. Just be aware, she added, that \u201cit\u2019s definitely more pricey than wood or paint.\u201d", "answer": "limestone", "sentence": "Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Enger recommended using a \u201cclean and simple\u201d design that would appeal to both modern and traditional tastes. \u201cMost people today don\u2019t want anything too fussy,\u201d she said. It\u2019s also important to be aware of how the original surround was built. Many surrounds are made from brick veneer that is just stuck onto the wall, Ms. Enger said, and they can be removed relatively easily and replaced. But if the brick is an integral part of the wall, a cover-up job may be required. If you\u2019re aiming for all-out luxury, you might consider installing a custom stone surround. Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features. \u201cIt was something that everyone \u2013 realtors, potential buyers and friends \u2013 loved,\u201d she said. Just be aware, she added, that \u201cit\u2019s definitely more pricey than wood or paint.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Enger recommended using a \u201cclean and simple\u201d design that would appeal to both modern and traditional tastes. \u201cMost people today don\u2019t want anything too fussy,\u201d she said. It\u2019s also important to be aware of how the original surround was built. Many surrounds are made from brick veneer that is just stuck onto the wall, Ms. Enger said, and they can be removed relatively easily and replaced. But if the brick is an integral part of the wall, a cover-up job may be required. If you\u2019re aiming for all-out luxury, you might consider installing a custom stone surround. Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features. \u201cIt was something that everyone \u2013 realtors, potential buyers and friends \u2013 loved,\u201d she said. Just be aware, she added, that \u201cit\u2019s definitely more pricey than wood or paint.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features."} +{"question": "What material cost more than others when used to build a mantel?", "paragraph": "Ms. Enger recommended using a \u201cclean and simple\u201d design that would appeal to both modern and traditional tastes. \u201cMost people today don\u2019t want anything too fussy,\u201d she said. It\u2019s also important to be aware of how the original surround was built. Many surrounds are made from brick veneer that is just stuck onto the wall, Ms. Enger said, and they can be removed relatively easily and replaced. But if the brick is an integral part of the wall, a cover-up job may be required. If you\u2019re aiming for all-out luxury, you might consider installing a custom stone surround. Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features. \u201cIt was something that everyone \u2013 realtors, potential buyers and friends \u2013 loved,\u201d she said. Just be aware, she added, that \u201cit\u2019s definitely more pricey than wood or paint.\u201d", "answer": "limestone", "sentence": "Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Enger recommended using a \u201cclean and simple\u201d design that would appeal to both modern and traditional tastes. \u201cMost people today don\u2019t want anything too fussy,\u201d she said. It\u2019s also important to be aware of how the original surround was built. Many surrounds are made from brick veneer that is just stuck onto the wall, Ms. Enger said, and they can be removed relatively easily and replaced. But if the brick is an integral part of the wall, a cover-up job may be required. If you\u2019re aiming for all-out luxury, you might consider installing a custom stone surround. Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features. \u201cIt was something that everyone \u2013 realtors, potential buyers and friends \u2013 loved,\u201d she said. Just be aware, she added, that \u201cit\u2019s definitely more pricey than wood or paint.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Enger recommended using a \u201cclean and simple\u201d design that would appeal to both modern and traditional tastes. \u201cMost people today don\u2019t want anything too fussy,\u201d she said. It\u2019s also important to be aware of how the original surround was built. Many surrounds are made from brick veneer that is just stuck onto the wall, Ms. Enger said, and they can be removed relatively easily and replaced. But if the brick is an integral part of the wall, a cover-up job may be required. If you\u2019re aiming for all-out luxury, you might consider installing a custom stone surround. Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features. \u201cIt was something that everyone \u2013 realtors, potential buyers and friends \u2013 loved,\u201d she said. Just be aware, she added, that \u201cit\u2019s definitely more pricey than wood or paint.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features."} +{"question": "What might need to be done if brick is a large part of the wall?", "paragraph": "Ms. Enger recommended using a \u201cclean and simple\u201d design that would appeal to both modern and traditional tastes. \u201cMost people today don\u2019t want anything too fussy,\u201d she said. It\u2019s also important to be aware of how the original surround was built. Many surrounds are made from brick veneer that is just stuck onto the wall, Ms. Enger said, and they can be removed relatively easily and replaced. But if the brick is an integral part of the wall, a cover-up job may be required. If you\u2019re aiming for all-out luxury, you might consider installing a custom stone surround. Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features. \u201cIt was something that everyone \u2013 realtors, potential buyers and friends \u2013 loved,\u201d she said. Just be aware, she added, that \u201cit\u2019s definitely more pricey than wood or paint.\u201d", "answer": "a cover-up job may be required", "sentence": "But if the brick is an integral part of the wall, a cover-up job may be required .", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Enger recommended using a \u201cclean and simple\u201d design that would appeal to both modern and traditional tastes. \u201cMost people today don\u2019t want anything too fussy,\u201d she said. It\u2019s also important to be aware of how the original surround was built. Many surrounds are made from brick veneer that is just stuck onto the wall, Ms. Enger said, and they can be removed relatively easily and replaced. But if the brick is an integral part of the wall, a cover-up job may be required . If you\u2019re aiming for all-out luxury, you might consider installing a custom stone surround. Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features. \u201cIt was something that everyone \u2013 realtors, potential buyers and friends \u2013 loved,\u201d she said. Just be aware, she added, that \u201cit\u2019s definitely more pricey than wood or paint.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Enger recommended using a \u201cclean and simple\u201d design that would appeal to both modern and traditional tastes. \u201cMost people today don\u2019t want anything too fussy,\u201d she said. It\u2019s also important to be aware of how the original surround was built. Many surrounds are made from brick veneer that is just stuck onto the wall, Ms. Enger said, and they can be removed relatively easily and replaced. But if the brick is an integral part of the wall, a cover-up job may be required . If you\u2019re aiming for all-out luxury, you might consider installing a custom stone surround. Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features. \u201cIt was something that everyone \u2013 realtors, potential buyers and friends \u2013 loved,\u201d she said. Just be aware, she added, that \u201cit\u2019s definitely more pricey than wood or paint.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But if the brick is an integral part of the wall, a cover-up job may be required ."} +{"question": "What's the best material to use for a surround when you want a lot of luxury?", "paragraph": "Ms. Enger recommended using a \u201cclean and simple\u201d design that would appeal to both modern and traditional tastes. \u201cMost people today don\u2019t want anything too fussy,\u201d she said. It\u2019s also important to be aware of how the original surround was built. Many surrounds are made from brick veneer that is just stuck onto the wall, Ms. Enger said, and they can be removed relatively easily and replaced. But if the brick is an integral part of the wall, a cover-up job may be required. If you\u2019re aiming for all-out luxury, you might consider installing a custom stone surround. Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features. \u201cIt was something that everyone \u2013 realtors, potential buyers and friends \u2013 loved,\u201d she said. Just be aware, she added, that \u201cit\u2019s definitely more pricey than wood or paint.\u201d", "answer": "custom stone", "sentence": "If you\u2019re aiming for all-out luxury, you might consider installing a custom stone surround.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Enger recommended using a \u201cclean and simple\u201d design that would appeal to both modern and traditional tastes. \u201cMost people today don\u2019t want anything too fussy,\u201d she said. It\u2019s also important to be aware of how the original surround was built. Many surrounds are made from brick veneer that is just stuck onto the wall, Ms. Enger said, and they can be removed relatively easily and replaced. But if the brick is an integral part of the wall, a cover-up job may be required. If you\u2019re aiming for all-out luxury, you might consider installing a custom stone surround. Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features. \u201cIt was something that everyone \u2013 realtors, potential buyers and friends \u2013 loved,\u201d she said. Just be aware, she added, that \u201cit\u2019s definitely more pricey than wood or paint.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Enger recommended using a \u201cclean and simple\u201d design that would appeal to both modern and traditional tastes. \u201cMost people today don\u2019t want anything too fussy,\u201d she said. It\u2019s also important to be aware of how the original surround was built. Many surrounds are made from brick veneer that is just stuck onto the wall, Ms. Enger said, and they can be removed relatively easily and replaced. But if the brick is an integral part of the wall, a cover-up job may be required. If you\u2019re aiming for all-out luxury, you might consider installing a custom stone surround. Ms. Enger built a clean-lined limestone mantel for a spec house in Hoboken that she and her husband sold last May, she said, and it became one of the home\u2019s most talked-about selling features. \u201cIt was something that everyone \u2013 realtors, potential buyers and friends \u2013 loved,\u201d she said. Just be aware, she added, that \u201cit\u2019s definitely more pricey than wood or paint.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "If you\u2019re aiming for all-out luxury, you might consider installing a custom stone surround."} +{"question": "What was stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion?", "paragraph": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers. \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "answer": "tortellini", "sentence": "After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese.", "paragraph_sentence": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers. \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "paragraph_answer": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers. \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "sentence_answer": "After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese."} +{"question": "What type of fish was served?", "paragraph": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers. \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "answer": "monkfish tail", "sentence": "This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e.", "paragraph_sentence": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers. \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "paragraph_answer": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers. \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "sentence_answer": "This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e."} +{"question": "What was flavorful?", "paragraph": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers. \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "answer": "herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes", "sentence": "This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes , then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e.", "paragraph_sentence": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes , then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers. \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "paragraph_answer": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes , then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers. \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "sentence_answer": "This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes , then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e."} +{"question": "What type of ice cream was on the menu?", "paragraph": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers. \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "answer": "Sesame", "sentence": "Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal.", "paragraph_sentence": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers. \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "paragraph_answer": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers. \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "sentence_answer": " Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal."} +{"question": "Where was the wine made?", "paragraph": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers. \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "answer": "foreign producers", "sentence": "Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers .", "paragraph_sentence": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers . \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "paragraph_answer": "On a balmy September evening, the place was marked by the hushed whispers of diners trying to figure out their first dish, ourselves included. After a cursory, but necessary, explanation from one of the chefs, we all tucked into fresh tortellini stuffed with eggplant and pickled onion in an Iranian lemon bouillon with chunks of orange-hued Mimolette cheese. This was followed by a flavorful herb-marinated beef carpaccio sprinkled with crushed peanuts, pickled cucumber and veils of radishes, then a buttery-smooth monkfish tail with maki rice chips and ginger-saut\u00e9ed broccoli pur\u00e9e. Sesame ice cream crowned with crumbled hazelnuts and fresh figs ended the meal. Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers . \u201cThe idea behind the wine was like our cooking: Make it as international as possible,\u201d Mr. Lahaut said.", "sentence_answer": "Going against the local grain, the wine offering is a careful edit of foreign producers ."} +{"question": "What did Madonna apologize for on Wednesday evening?", "paragraph": "Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening. She looked tense as she apologized. \u201cI\u2019m late for everything now,\u201d she said. She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d; a suspect has been indicted in Israel. Madonna\u2019s immediate response was to release the finished, and much improved, versions of six songs for sale; they zoomed into the top 10 worldwide. She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album, which arrives on Tuesday. It\u2019s at once familiar \u2014 full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch \u2014 and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna\u2019s constant supervision. \u201cI intended to think about things, choose things more slowly \u2014 the whole process,\u201d she said. \u201cThen I got forced into putting everything out, and now I\u2019m trying to catch up with myself.\u201d", "answer": "running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home", "sentence": "Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening.", "paragraph_sentence": " Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening. She looked tense as she apologized. \u201cI\u2019m late for everything now,\u201d she said. She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d; a suspect has been indicted in Israel. Madonna\u2019s immediate response was to release the finished, and much improved, versions of six songs for sale; they zoomed into the top 10 worldwide. She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album, which arrives on Tuesday. It\u2019s at once familiar \u2014 full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch \u2014 and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna\u2019s constant supervision. \u201cI intended to think about things, choose things more slowly \u2014 the whole process,\u201d she said. \u201cThen I got forced into putting everything out, and now I\u2019m trying to catch up with myself.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening. She looked tense as she apologized. \u201cI\u2019m late for everything now,\u201d she said. She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d; a suspect has been indicted in Israel. Madonna\u2019s immediate response was to release the finished, and much improved, versions of six songs for sale; they zoomed into the top 10 worldwide. She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album, which arrives on Tuesday. It\u2019s at once familiar \u2014 full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch \u2014 and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna\u2019s constant supervision. \u201cI intended to think about things, choose things more slowly \u2014 the whole process,\u201d she said. \u201cThen I got forced into putting everything out, and now I\u2019m trying to catch up with myself.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening."} +{"question": "Where was the suspect from?", "paragraph": "Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening. She looked tense as she apologized. \u201cI\u2019m late for everything now,\u201d she said. She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d; a suspect has been indicted in Israel. Madonna\u2019s immediate response was to release the finished, and much improved, versions of six songs for sale; they zoomed into the top 10 worldwide. She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album, which arrives on Tuesday. It\u2019s at once familiar \u2014 full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch \u2014 and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna\u2019s constant supervision. \u201cI intended to think about things, choose things more slowly \u2014 the whole process,\u201d she said. \u201cThen I got forced into putting everything out, and now I\u2019m trying to catch up with myself.\u201d", "answer": "Israel", "sentence": "She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d; a suspect has been indicted in Israel .", "paragraph_sentence": "Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening. She looked tense as she apologized. \u201cI\u2019m late for everything now,\u201d she said. She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d; a suspect has been indicted in Israel . Madonna\u2019s immediate response was to release the finished, and much improved, versions of six songs for sale; they zoomed into the top 10 worldwide. She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album, which arrives on Tuesday. It\u2019s at once familiar \u2014 full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch \u2014 and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna\u2019s constant supervision. \u201cI intended to think about things, choose things more slowly \u2014 the whole process,\u201d she said. \u201cThen I got forced into putting everything out, and now I\u2019m trying to catch up with myself.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening. She looked tense as she apologized. \u201cI\u2019m late for everything now,\u201d she said. She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d; a suspect has been indicted in Israel . Madonna\u2019s immediate response was to release the finished, and much improved, versions of six songs for sale; they zoomed into the top 10 worldwide. She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album, which arrives on Tuesday. It\u2019s at once familiar \u2014 full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch \u2014 and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna\u2019s constant supervision. \u201cI intended to think about things, choose things more slowly \u2014 the whole process,\u201d she said. \u201cThen I got forced into putting everything out, and now I\u2019m trying to catch up with myself.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d; a suspect has been indicted in Israel ."} +{"question": "What did Madonna mention happened in December that caused her to be later for everything?", "paragraph": "Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening. She looked tense as she apologized. \u201cI\u2019m late for everything now,\u201d she said. She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d; a suspect has been indicted in Israel. Madonna\u2019s immediate response was to release the finished, and much improved, versions of six songs for sale; they zoomed into the top 10 worldwide. She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album, which arrives on Tuesday. It\u2019s at once familiar \u2014 full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch \u2014 and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna\u2019s constant supervision. \u201cI intended to think about things, choose things more slowly \u2014 the whole process,\u201d she said. \u201cThen I got forced into putting everything out, and now I\u2019m trying to catch up with myself.\u201d", "answer": "a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d", "sentence": "She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d ; a suspect has been indicted in Israel.", "paragraph_sentence": "Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening. She looked tense as she apologized. \u201cI\u2019m late for everything now,\u201d she said. She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d ; a suspect has been indicted in Israel. Madonna\u2019s immediate response was to release the finished, and much improved, versions of six songs for sale; they zoomed into the top 10 worldwide. She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album, which arrives on Tuesday. It\u2019s at once familiar \u2014 full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch \u2014 and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna\u2019s constant supervision. \u201cI intended to think about things, choose things more slowly \u2014 the whole process,\u201d she said. \u201cThen I got forced into putting everything out, and now I\u2019m trying to catch up with myself.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening. She looked tense as she apologized. \u201cI\u2019m late for everything now,\u201d she said. She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d ; a suspect has been indicted in Israel. Madonna\u2019s immediate response was to release the finished, and much improved, versions of six songs for sale; they zoomed into the top 10 worldwide. She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album, which arrives on Tuesday. It\u2019s at once familiar \u2014 full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch \u2014 and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna\u2019s constant supervision. \u201cI intended to think about things, choose things more slowly \u2014 the whole process,\u201d she said. \u201cThen I got forced into putting everything out, and now I\u2019m trying to catch up with myself.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d ; a suspect has been indicted in Israel."} +{"question": "What did Madonna do for the album which arrived Tuesday?", "paragraph": "Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening. She looked tense as she apologized. \u201cI\u2019m late for everything now,\u201d she said. She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d; a suspect has been indicted in Israel. Madonna\u2019s immediate response was to release the finished, and much improved, versions of six songs for sale; they zoomed into the top 10 worldwide. She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album, which arrives on Tuesday. It\u2019s at once familiar \u2014 full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch \u2014 and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna\u2019s constant supervision. \u201cI intended to think about things, choose things more slowly \u2014 the whole process,\u201d she said. \u201cThen I got forced into putting everything out, and now I\u2019m trying to catch up with myself.\u201d", "answer": "She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album", "sentence": "She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album , which arrives on Tuesday.", "paragraph_sentence": "Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening. She looked tense as she apologized. \u201cI\u2019m late for everything now,\u201d she said. She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d; a suspect has been indicted in Israel. Madonna\u2019s immediate response was to release the finished, and much improved, versions of six songs for sale; they zoomed into the top 10 worldwide. She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album , which arrives on Tuesday. It\u2019s at once familiar \u2014 full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch \u2014 and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna\u2019s constant supervision. \u201cI intended to think about things, choose things more slowly \u2014 the whole process,\u201d she said. \u201cThen I got forced into putting everything out, and now I\u2019m trying to catch up with myself.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening. She looked tense as she apologized. \u201cI\u2019m late for everything now,\u201d she said. She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d; a suspect has been indicted in Israel. Madonna\u2019s immediate response was to release the finished, and much improved, versions of six songs for sale; they zoomed into the top 10 worldwide. She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album , which arrives on Tuesday. It\u2019s at once familiar \u2014 full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch \u2014 and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna\u2019s constant supervision. \u201cI intended to think about things, choose things more slowly \u2014 the whole process,\u201d she said. \u201cThen I got forced into putting everything out, and now I\u2019m trying to catch up with myself.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album , which arrives on Tuesday."} +{"question": "Who was Madonna supervising?", "paragraph": "Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening. She looked tense as she apologized. \u201cI\u2019m late for everything now,\u201d she said. She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d; a suspect has been indicted in Israel. Madonna\u2019s immediate response was to release the finished, and much improved, versions of six songs for sale; they zoomed into the top 10 worldwide. She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album, which arrives on Tuesday. It\u2019s at once familiar \u2014 full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch \u2014 and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna\u2019s constant supervision. \u201cI intended to think about things, choose things more slowly \u2014 the whole process,\u201d she said. \u201cThen I got forced into putting everything out, and now I\u2019m trying to catch up with myself.\u201d", "answer": "made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands", "sentence": "It\u2019s at once familiar \u2014 full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch \u2014 and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna\u2019s constant supervision.", "paragraph_sentence": "Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening. She looked tense as she apologized. \u201cI\u2019m late for everything now,\u201d she said. She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d; a suspect has been indicted in Israel. Madonna\u2019s immediate response was to release the finished, and much improved, versions of six songs for sale; they zoomed into the top 10 worldwide. She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album, which arrives on Tuesday. It\u2019s at once familiar \u2014 full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch \u2014 and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna\u2019s constant supervision. \u201cI intended to think about things, choose things more slowly \u2014 the whole process,\u201d she said. \u201cThen I got forced into putting everything out, and now I\u2019m trying to catch up with myself.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Madonna was perfectly turned out and running nearly an hour late for an interview at her Upper East Side home on Wednesday evening. She looked tense as she apologized. \u201cI\u2019m late for everything now,\u201d she said. She added that she has been in a rush since December, when a hacker put unfinished songs online from her new album, \u201cRebel Heart\u201d; a suspect has been indicted in Israel. Madonna\u2019s immediate response was to release the finished, and much improved, versions of six songs for sale; they zoomed into the top 10 worldwide. She also worked frantically to finish the rest of the album, which arrives on Tuesday. It\u2019s at once familiar \u2014 full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch \u2014 and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna\u2019s constant supervision. \u201cI intended to think about things, choose things more slowly \u2014 the whole process,\u201d she said. \u201cThen I got forced into putting everything out, and now I\u2019m trying to catch up with myself.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "It\u2019s at once familiar \u2014 full of love, dancing, empowerment, blasphemy and raunch \u2014 and up-to-the-minute, made with a huge number of collaborators and tweaked by multiple hands under Madonna\u2019s constant supervision."} +{"question": "What did the experience change into?", "paragraph": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy. A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells.\u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "answer": "something quite crazy", "sentence": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy .", "paragraph_sentence": " She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy . A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells.\u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "paragraph_answer": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy . A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells.\u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "sentence_answer": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy ."} +{"question": "What was considered instant?", "paragraph": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy. A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells.\u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "answer": "Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction.", "sentence": "Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating.", "paragraph_sentence": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy. A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells.\u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "paragraph_answer": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy. A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells.\u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "sentence_answer": " Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating."} +{"question": "Where did they speak.", "paragraph": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy. A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells.\u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "answer": "in her sitting room", "sentence": "We spoke in her sitting room , where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace.", "paragraph_sentence": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy. A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room , where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells.\u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "paragraph_answer": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy. A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room , where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells.\u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "sentence_answer": "We spoke in her sitting room , where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace."} +{"question": "What was above the fire place?", "paragraph": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy. A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells.\u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "answer": "a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting", "sentence": "We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace.", "paragraph_sentence": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy. A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells.\u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "paragraph_answer": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy. A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells.\u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "sentence_answer": "We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace."} +{"question": "What is Madonna working on?", "paragraph": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy. A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells.\u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "answer": "the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells.", "sentence": "A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells. \u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "paragraph_sentence": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy. A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells. \u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor. ", "paragraph_answer": "She continued: \u201cWhat started out as an invigorating, life-enhancing, joyous experience evolved into something quite crazy. A strange artistic process, but a sign of the time. We\u2019re all digital, we\u2019re all vulnerable and everything\u2019s instant \u2014 so instant. Instant success and instant failure. Instant discovery, instant destruction, instant construction. It\u2019s as splendid and wonderful as it is devastating. Honestly, to me it\u2019s the death of being an artist in many ways.\u201d We spoke in her sitting room, where a Fernand L\u00e9ger painting presides from above the fireplace. A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells. \u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor.", "sentence_answer": "A large coffee table was neatly stacked with books and folders of photographs that Madonna has been using for research as she works on the screenplay for her next film project, based on the novel \u201cThe Impossible Lives of Greta Wells. \u201d Imposing cream-colored couches flanked the coffee table, but Madonna preferred sitting on the floor."} +{"question": "What does Madonna call it when she works on tracks in person?", "paragraph": "But Madonna insisted on collaborating in what she called her \u201cold-fashioned\u201d way \u2014 not handing off tracks to be polished for later approval, but shaping them in person. \u201cI never leave the room,\u201d she said. \u201cSometimes I think that makes them mad. Like, \u2018Don\u2019t you have to go to the bathroom? Don\u2019t you have somewhere to go? Don\u2019t you want to go make some calls?\u2019 \u201d Toby Gad, a producer who has also written with Beyonc\u00e9, worked on 14 songs with Madonna; seven, including \u201cJoan of Arc\u201d and \u201cLiving for Love,\u201d reached the album. \u201cThe first week she was quite intimidating,\u201d he said. \u201cIt was like a test phase. You have to criticize, but you can\u2019t really offend. But she also likes honest, harsh critics to say things as they are. It worked out really well and she got sweeter and sweeter.\u201d", "answer": "her \u201cold-fashioned\u201d way", "sentence": "But Madonna insisted on collaborating in what she called her \u201cold-fashioned\u201d way \u2014 not handing off tracks to be polished for later approval, but shaping them in person.", "paragraph_sentence": " But Madonna insisted on collaborating in what she called her \u201cold-fashioned\u201d way \u2014 not handing off tracks to be polished for later approval, but shaping them in person. \u201cI never leave the room,\u201d she said. \u201cSometimes I think that makes them mad. Like, \u2018Don\u2019t you have to go to the bathroom? Don\u2019t you have somewhere to go? Don\u2019t you want to go make some calls?\u2019 \u201d Toby Gad, a producer who has also written with Beyonc\u00e9, worked on 14 songs with Madonna; seven, including \u201cJoan of Arc\u201d and \u201cLiving for Love,\u201d reached the album. \u201cThe first week she was quite intimidating,\u201d he said. \u201cIt was like a test phase. You have to criticize, but you can\u2019t really offend. But she also likes honest, harsh critics to say things as they are. It worked out really well and she got sweeter and sweeter.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But Madonna insisted on collaborating in what she called her \u201cold-fashioned\u201d way \u2014 not handing off tracks to be polished for later approval, but shaping them in person. \u201cI never leave the room,\u201d she said. \u201cSometimes I think that makes them mad. Like, \u2018Don\u2019t you have to go to the bathroom? Don\u2019t you have somewhere to go? Don\u2019t you want to go make some calls?\u2019 \u201d Toby Gad, a producer who has also written with Beyonc\u00e9, worked on 14 songs with Madonna; seven, including \u201cJoan of Arc\u201d and \u201cLiving for Love,\u201d reached the album. \u201cThe first week she was quite intimidating,\u201d he said. \u201cIt was like a test phase. You have to criticize, but you can\u2019t really offend. But she also likes honest, harsh critics to say things as they are. It worked out really well and she got sweeter and sweeter.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But Madonna insisted on collaborating in what she called her \u201cold-fashioned\u201d way \u2014 not handing off tracks to be polished for later approval, but shaping them in person."} +{"question": "Who was the producer who also worked with Beyonce?", "paragraph": "But Madonna insisted on collaborating in what she called her \u201cold-fashioned\u201d way \u2014 not handing off tracks to be polished for later approval, but shaping them in person. \u201cI never leave the room,\u201d she said. \u201cSometimes I think that makes them mad. Like, \u2018Don\u2019t you have to go to the bathroom? Don\u2019t you have somewhere to go? Don\u2019t you want to go make some calls?\u2019 \u201d Toby Gad, a producer who has also written with Beyonc\u00e9, worked on 14 songs with Madonna; seven, including \u201cJoan of Arc\u201d and \u201cLiving for Love,\u201d reached the album. \u201cThe first week she was quite intimidating,\u201d he said. \u201cIt was like a test phase. You have to criticize, but you can\u2019t really offend. But she also likes honest, harsh critics to say things as they are. It worked out really well and she got sweeter and sweeter.\u201d", "answer": "Toby Gad", "sentence": "Don\u2019t you want to go make some calls?\u2019 \u201d Toby Gad , a producer who has also written with Beyonc\u00e9, worked on 14 songs with Madonna; seven, including \u201cJoan of Arc\u201d and \u201cLiving for Love,\u201d reached the album.", "paragraph_sentence": "But Madonna insisted on collaborating in what she called her \u201cold-fashioned\u201d way \u2014 not handing off tracks to be polished for later approval, but shaping them in person. \u201cI never leave the room,\u201d she said. \u201cSometimes I think that makes them mad. Like, \u2018Don\u2019t you have to go to the bathroom? Don\u2019t you have somewhere to go? Don\u2019t you want to go make some calls?\u2019 \u201d Toby Gad , a producer who has also written with Beyonc\u00e9, worked on 14 songs with Madonna; seven, including \u201cJoan of Arc\u201d and \u201cLiving for Love,\u201d reached the album. \u201cThe first week she was quite intimidating,\u201d he said. \u201cIt was like a test phase. You have to criticize, but you can\u2019t really offend. But she also likes honest, harsh critics to say things as they are. It worked out really well and she got sweeter and sweeter.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But Madonna insisted on collaborating in what she called her \u201cold-fashioned\u201d way \u2014 not handing off tracks to be polished for later approval, but shaping them in person. \u201cI never leave the room,\u201d she said. \u201cSometimes I think that makes them mad. Like, \u2018Don\u2019t you have to go to the bathroom? Don\u2019t you have somewhere to go? Don\u2019t you want to go make some calls?\u2019 \u201d Toby Gad , a producer who has also written with Beyonc\u00e9, worked on 14 songs with Madonna; seven, including \u201cJoan of Arc\u201d and \u201cLiving for Love,\u201d reached the album. \u201cThe first week she was quite intimidating,\u201d he said. \u201cIt was like a test phase. You have to criticize, but you can\u2019t really offend. But she also likes honest, harsh critics to say things as they are. It worked out really well and she got sweeter and sweeter.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Don\u2019t you want to go make some calls?\u2019 \u201d Toby Gad , a producer who has also written with Beyonc\u00e9, worked on 14 songs with Madonna; seven, including \u201cJoan of Arc\u201d and \u201cLiving for Love,\u201d reached the album."} +{"question": "What has Toby Gad worked with Madonna on?", "paragraph": "But Madonna insisted on collaborating in what she called her \u201cold-fashioned\u201d way \u2014 not handing off tracks to be polished for later approval, but shaping them in person. \u201cI never leave the room,\u201d she said. \u201cSometimes I think that makes them mad. Like, \u2018Don\u2019t you have to go to the bathroom? Don\u2019t you have somewhere to go? Don\u2019t you want to go make some calls?\u2019 \u201d Toby Gad, a producer who has also written with Beyonc\u00e9, worked on 14 songs with Madonna; seven, including \u201cJoan of Arc\u201d and \u201cLiving for Love,\u201d reached the album. \u201cThe first week she was quite intimidating,\u201d he said. \u201cIt was like a test phase. You have to criticize, but you can\u2019t really offend. But she also likes honest, harsh critics to say things as they are. It worked out really well and she got sweeter and sweeter.\u201d", "answer": "14 songs with Madonna; seven, including \u201cJoan of Arc\u201d and \u201cLiving for Love,", "sentence": "Toby Gad, a producer who has also written with Beyonc\u00e9, worked on 14 songs with Madonna; seven, including \u201cJoan of Arc\u201d and \u201cLiving for Love, \u201d reached the album.", "paragraph_sentence": "But Madonna insisted on collaborating in what she called her \u201cold-fashioned\u201d way \u2014 not handing off tracks to be polished for later approval, but shaping them in person. \u201cI never leave the room,\u201d she said. \u201cSometimes I think that makes them mad. Like, \u2018Don\u2019t you have to go to the bathroom? Don\u2019t you have somewhere to go? Don\u2019t you want to go make some calls?\u2019 \u201d Toby Gad, a producer who has also written with Beyonc\u00e9, worked on 14 songs with Madonna; seven, including \u201cJoan of Arc\u201d and \u201cLiving for Love, \u201d reached the album. \u201cThe first week she was quite intimidating,\u201d he said. \u201cIt was like a test phase. You have to criticize, but you can\u2019t really offend. But she also likes honest, harsh critics to say things as they are. It worked out really well and she got sweeter and sweeter.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But Madonna insisted on collaborating in what she called her \u201cold-fashioned\u201d way \u2014 not handing off tracks to be polished for later approval, but shaping them in person. \u201cI never leave the room,\u201d she said. \u201cSometimes I think that makes them mad. Like, \u2018Don\u2019t you have to go to the bathroom? Don\u2019t you have somewhere to go? Don\u2019t you want to go make some calls?\u2019 \u201d Toby Gad, a producer who has also written with Beyonc\u00e9, worked on 14 songs with Madonna; seven, including \u201cJoan of Arc\u201d and \u201cLiving for Love, \u201d reached the album. \u201cThe first week she was quite intimidating,\u201d he said. \u201cIt was like a test phase. You have to criticize, but you can\u2019t really offend. But she also likes honest, harsh critics to say things as they are. It worked out really well and she got sweeter and sweeter.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Toby Gad, a producer who has also written with Beyonc\u00e9, worked on 14 songs with Madonna; seven, including \u201cJoan of Arc\u201d and \u201cLiving for Love, \u201d reached the album."} +{"question": "What did Toby Gad think of Madonna?", "paragraph": "But Madonna insisted on collaborating in what she called her \u201cold-fashioned\u201d way \u2014 not handing off tracks to be polished for later approval, but shaping them in person. \u201cI never leave the room,\u201d she said. \u201cSometimes I think that makes them mad. Like, \u2018Don\u2019t you have to go to the bathroom? Don\u2019t you have somewhere to go? Don\u2019t you want to go make some calls?\u2019 \u201d Toby Gad, a producer who has also written with Beyonc\u00e9, worked on 14 songs with Madonna; seven, including \u201cJoan of Arc\u201d and \u201cLiving for Love,\u201d reached the album. \u201cThe first week she was quite intimidating,\u201d he said. \u201cIt was like a test phase. You have to criticize, but you can\u2019t really offend. But she also likes honest, harsh critics to say things as they are. It worked out really well and she got sweeter and sweeter.\u201d", "answer": "The first week she was quite intimidating,", "sentence": "\u201c The first week she was quite intimidating, \u201d he said.", "paragraph_sentence": "But Madonna insisted on collaborating in what she called her \u201cold-fashioned\u201d way \u2014 not handing off tracks to be polished for later approval, but shaping them in person. \u201cI never leave the room,\u201d she said. \u201cSometimes I think that makes them mad. Like, \u2018Don\u2019t you have to go to the bathroom? Don\u2019t you have somewhere to go? Don\u2019t you want to go make some calls?\u2019 \u201d Toby Gad, a producer who has also written with Beyonc\u00e9, worked on 14 songs with Madonna; seven, including \u201cJoan of Arc\u201d and \u201cLiving for Love,\u201d reached the album. \u201c The first week she was quite intimidating, \u201d he said. \u201cIt was like a test phase. You have to criticize, but you can\u2019t really offend. But she also likes honest, harsh critics to say things as they are. It worked out really well and she got sweeter and sweeter.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But Madonna insisted on collaborating in what she called her \u201cold-fashioned\u201d way \u2014 not handing off tracks to be polished for later approval, but shaping them in person. \u201cI never leave the room,\u201d she said. \u201cSometimes I think that makes them mad. Like, \u2018Don\u2019t you have to go to the bathroom? Don\u2019t you have somewhere to go? Don\u2019t you want to go make some calls?\u2019 \u201d Toby Gad, a producer who has also written with Beyonc\u00e9, worked on 14 songs with Madonna; seven, including \u201cJoan of Arc\u201d and \u201cLiving for Love,\u201d reached the album. \u201c The first week she was quite intimidating, \u201d he said. \u201cIt was like a test phase. You have to criticize, but you can\u2019t really offend. But she also likes honest, harsh critics to say things as they are. It worked out really well and she got sweeter and sweeter.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201c The first week she was quite intimidating, \u201d he said."} +{"question": "What did Toby Gad say Madonna likes?", "paragraph": "But Madonna insisted on collaborating in what she called her \u201cold-fashioned\u201d way \u2014 not handing off tracks to be polished for later approval, but shaping them in person. \u201cI never leave the room,\u201d she said. \u201cSometimes I think that makes them mad. Like, \u2018Don\u2019t you have to go to the bathroom? Don\u2019t you have somewhere to go? Don\u2019t you want to go make some calls?\u2019 \u201d Toby Gad, a producer who has also written with Beyonc\u00e9, worked on 14 songs with Madonna; seven, including \u201cJoan of Arc\u201d and \u201cLiving for Love,\u201d reached the album. \u201cThe first week she was quite intimidating,\u201d he said. \u201cIt was like a test phase. You have to criticize, but you can\u2019t really offend. But she also likes honest, harsh critics to say things as they are. It worked out really well and she got sweeter and sweeter.\u201d", "answer": "she also likes honest, harsh critics to say things as they are", "sentence": "But she also likes honest, harsh critics to say things as they are .", "paragraph_sentence": "But Madonna insisted on collaborating in what she called her \u201cold-fashioned\u201d way \u2014 not handing off tracks to be polished for later approval, but shaping them in person. \u201cI never leave the room,\u201d she said. \u201cSometimes I think that makes them mad. Like, \u2018Don\u2019t you have to go to the bathroom? Don\u2019t you have somewhere to go? Don\u2019t you want to go make some calls?\u2019 \u201d Toby Gad, a producer who has also written with Beyonc\u00e9, worked on 14 songs with Madonna; seven, including \u201cJoan of Arc\u201d and \u201cLiving for Love,\u201d reached the album. \u201cThe first week she was quite intimidating,\u201d he said. \u201cIt was like a test phase. You have to criticize, but you can\u2019t really offend. But she also likes honest, harsh critics to say things as they are . It worked out really well and she got sweeter and sweeter.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But Madonna insisted on collaborating in what she called her \u201cold-fashioned\u201d way \u2014 not handing off tracks to be polished for later approval, but shaping them in person. \u201cI never leave the room,\u201d she said. \u201cSometimes I think that makes them mad. Like, \u2018Don\u2019t you have to go to the bathroom? Don\u2019t you have somewhere to go? Don\u2019t you want to go make some calls?\u2019 \u201d Toby Gad, a producer who has also written with Beyonc\u00e9, worked on 14 songs with Madonna; seven, including \u201cJoan of Arc\u201d and \u201cLiving for Love,\u201d reached the album. \u201cThe first week she was quite intimidating,\u201d he said. \u201cIt was like a test phase. You have to criticize, but you can\u2019t really offend. But she also likes honest, harsh critics to say things as they are . It worked out really well and she got sweeter and sweeter.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But she also likes honest, harsh critics to say things as they are ."} +{"question": "Who was said to have had their own original style?", "paragraph": "Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel, 51, who is based in Paris, was trained in working with diamonds and precious colored stones by her grandfather, the well-known diamond specialist Marcel Rubel. Her 20-year career has been built on collaborations with such top French jewelers as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Boucheron. She also has worked at Fred and Mauboussin. Three years ago, she opened an old trunk in the attic of a family country house to rediscover the forgotten archives of her great uncles, John and Robert Rubel. She said the hundreds of drawings, gouaches, patents and even scale models of their designs revealed the unusual style and originality of their Art Deco creations.", "answer": "John and Robert Rubel", "sentence": "Three years ago, she opened an old trunk in the attic of a family country house to rediscover the forgotten archives of her great uncles, John and Robert Rubel .", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel, 51, who is based in Paris, was trained in working with diamonds and precious colored stones by her grandfather, the well-known diamond specialist Marcel Rubel. Her 20-year career has been built on collaborations with such top French jewelers as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Boucheron. She also has worked at Fred and Mauboussin. Three years ago, she opened an old trunk in the attic of a family country house to rediscover the forgotten archives of her great uncles, John and Robert Rubel . She said the hundreds of drawings, gouaches, patents and even scale models of their designs revealed the unusual style and originality of their Art Deco creations.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel, 51, who is based in Paris, was trained in working with diamonds and precious colored stones by her grandfather, the well-known diamond specialist Marcel Rubel. Her 20-year career has been built on collaborations with such top French jewelers as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Boucheron. She also has worked at Fred and Mauboussin. Three years ago, she opened an old trunk in the attic of a family country house to rediscover the forgotten archives of her great uncles, John and Robert Rubel . She said the hundreds of drawings, gouaches, patents and even scale models of their designs revealed the unusual style and originality of their Art Deco creations.", "sentence_answer": "Three years ago, she opened an old trunk in the attic of a family country house to rediscover the forgotten archives of her great uncles, John and Robert Rubel ."} +{"question": "What was Ms. Mizrahi-Rubles grandfather known for being?", "paragraph": "Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel, 51, who is based in Paris, was trained in working with diamonds and precious colored stones by her grandfather, the well-known diamond specialist Marcel Rubel. Her 20-year career has been built on collaborations with such top French jewelers as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Boucheron. She also has worked at Fred and Mauboussin. Three years ago, she opened an old trunk in the attic of a family country house to rediscover the forgotten archives of her great uncles, John and Robert Rubel. She said the hundreds of drawings, gouaches, patents and even scale models of their designs revealed the unusual style and originality of their Art Deco creations.", "answer": "diamond specialist", "sentence": "Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel, 51, who is based in Paris, was trained in working with diamonds and precious colored stones by her grandfather, the well-known diamond specialist Marcel Rubel.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel, 51, who is based in Paris, was trained in working with diamonds and precious colored stones by her grandfather, the well-known diamond specialist Marcel Rubel. Her 20-year career has been built on collaborations with such top French jewelers as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Boucheron. She also has worked at Fred and Mauboussin. Three years ago, she opened an old trunk in the attic of a family country house to rediscover the forgotten archives of her great uncles, John and Robert Rubel. She said the hundreds of drawings, gouaches, patents and even scale models of their designs revealed the unusual style and originality of their Art Deco creations.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel, 51, who is based in Paris, was trained in working with diamonds and precious colored stones by her grandfather, the well-known diamond specialist Marcel Rubel. Her 20-year career has been built on collaborations with such top French jewelers as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Boucheron. She also has worked at Fred and Mauboussin. Three years ago, she opened an old trunk in the attic of a family country house to rediscover the forgotten archives of her great uncles, John and Robert Rubel. She said the hundreds of drawings, gouaches, patents and even scale models of their designs revealed the unusual style and originality of their Art Deco creations.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel, 51, who is based in Paris, was trained in working with diamonds and precious colored stones by her grandfather, the well-known diamond specialist Marcel Rubel."} +{"question": "Besides being precious what was another attribute of the stones Ms Mizrahi-Rubel was trained to work with?", "paragraph": "Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel, 51, who is based in Paris, was trained in working with diamonds and precious colored stones by her grandfather, the well-known diamond specialist Marcel Rubel. Her 20-year career has been built on collaborations with such top French jewelers as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Boucheron. She also has worked at Fred and Mauboussin. Three years ago, she opened an old trunk in the attic of a family country house to rediscover the forgotten archives of her great uncles, John and Robert Rubel. She said the hundreds of drawings, gouaches, patents and even scale models of their designs revealed the unusual style and originality of their Art Deco creations.", "answer": "colored", "sentence": "Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel, 51, who is based in Paris, was trained in working with diamonds and precious colored stones by her grandfather, the well-known diamond specialist Marcel Rubel.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel, 51, who is based in Paris, was trained in working with diamonds and precious colored stones by her grandfather, the well-known diamond specialist Marcel Rubel. Her 20-year career has been built on collaborations with such top French jewelers as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Boucheron. She also has worked at Fred and Mauboussin. Three years ago, she opened an old trunk in the attic of a family country house to rediscover the forgotten archives of her great uncles, John and Robert Rubel. She said the hundreds of drawings, gouaches, patents and even scale models of their designs revealed the unusual style and originality of their Art Deco creations.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel, 51, who is based in Paris, was trained in working with diamonds and precious colored stones by her grandfather, the well-known diamond specialist Marcel Rubel. Her 20-year career has been built on collaborations with such top French jewelers as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Boucheron. She also has worked at Fred and Mauboussin. Three years ago, she opened an old trunk in the attic of a family country house to rediscover the forgotten archives of her great uncles, John and Robert Rubel. She said the hundreds of drawings, gouaches, patents and even scale models of their designs revealed the unusual style and originality of their Art Deco creations.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel, 51, who is based in Paris, was trained in working with diamonds and precious colored stones by her grandfather, the well-known diamond specialist Marcel Rubel."} +{"question": "What did Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel open to view her uncles archives?", "paragraph": "Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel, 51, who is based in Paris, was trained in working with diamonds and precious colored stones by her grandfather, the well-known diamond specialist Marcel Rubel. Her 20-year career has been built on collaborations with such top French jewelers as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Boucheron. She also has worked at Fred and Mauboussin. Three years ago, she opened an old trunk in the attic of a family country house to rediscover the forgotten archives of her great uncles, John and Robert Rubel. She said the hundreds of drawings, gouaches, patents and even scale models of their designs revealed the unusual style and originality of their Art Deco creations.", "answer": "old trunk", "sentence": "Three years ago, she opened an old trunk in the attic of a family country house to rediscover the forgotten archives of her great uncles, John and Robert Rubel.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel, 51, who is based in Paris, was trained in working with diamonds and precious colored stones by her grandfather, the well-known diamond specialist Marcel Rubel. Her 20-year career has been built on collaborations with such top French jewelers as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Boucheron. She also has worked at Fred and Mauboussin. Three years ago, she opened an old trunk in the attic of a family country house to rediscover the forgotten archives of her great uncles, John and Robert Rubel. She said the hundreds of drawings, gouaches, patents and even scale models of their designs revealed the unusual style and originality of their Art Deco creations.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel, 51, who is based in Paris, was trained in working with diamonds and precious colored stones by her grandfather, the well-known diamond specialist Marcel Rubel. Her 20-year career has been built on collaborations with such top French jewelers as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Boucheron. She also has worked at Fred and Mauboussin. Three years ago, she opened an old trunk in the attic of a family country house to rediscover the forgotten archives of her great uncles, John and Robert Rubel. She said the hundreds of drawings, gouaches, patents and even scale models of their designs revealed the unusual style and originality of their Art Deco creations.", "sentence_answer": "Three years ago, she opened an old trunk in the attic of a family country house to rediscover the forgotten archives of her great uncles, John and Robert Rubel."} +{"question": "Who did Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel collaborate with during her career?", "paragraph": "Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel, 51, who is based in Paris, was trained in working with diamonds and precious colored stones by her grandfather, the well-known diamond specialist Marcel Rubel. Her 20-year career has been built on collaborations with such top French jewelers as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Boucheron. She also has worked at Fred and Mauboussin. Three years ago, she opened an old trunk in the attic of a family country house to rediscover the forgotten archives of her great uncles, John and Robert Rubel. She said the hundreds of drawings, gouaches, patents and even scale models of their designs revealed the unusual style and originality of their Art Deco creations.", "answer": "Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Boucheron", "sentence": "Her 20-year career has been built on collaborations with such top French jewelers as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Boucheron .", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel, 51, who is based in Paris, was trained in working with diamonds and precious colored stones by her grandfather, the well-known diamond specialist Marcel Rubel. Her 20-year career has been built on collaborations with such top French jewelers as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Boucheron . She also has worked at Fred and Mauboussin. Three years ago, she opened an old trunk in the attic of a family country house to rediscover the forgotten archives of her great uncles, John and Robert Rubel. She said the hundreds of drawings, gouaches, patents and even scale models of their designs revealed the unusual style and originality of their Art Deco creations.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel, 51, who is based in Paris, was trained in working with diamonds and precious colored stones by her grandfather, the well-known diamond specialist Marcel Rubel. Her 20-year career has been built on collaborations with such top French jewelers as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Boucheron . She also has worked at Fred and Mauboussin. Three years ago, she opened an old trunk in the attic of a family country house to rediscover the forgotten archives of her great uncles, John and Robert Rubel. She said the hundreds of drawings, gouaches, patents and even scale models of their designs revealed the unusual style and originality of their Art Deco creations.", "sentence_answer": "Her 20-year career has been built on collaborations with such top French jewelers as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Boucheron ."} +{"question": "What brand is Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel reviving?", "paragraph": "Success brought a private clientele and the Rubels opened stores on Fifth Avenue and in Palm Beach, Fla. But, by the mid-1950s, the boutiques had closed. The last vestiges of their fame are the vintage pieces that turn up for auction occasionally at Sotheby\u2019s, Christie\u2019s and Bonhams. Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me. Inspired by the shapes and bold colors of Rubel Fr\u00e8res style, the 18 pieces in the collection are made of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, blue and pink sapphires and blue-green tourmalines. \u201cI call it dancing jewelry\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s very colorful, very joyful with touches of Art Deco style.\u201d John Rubel\u2019s Modernist-style Rouleau bracelet of curved gold and blue and pink sapphires inspired Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel\u2019s Ginger ring, named for Ginger Rogers, which the buyer can have pav\u00e9d with diamonds, emeralds, or sapphires. The Mozambique ruby and diamond ring, named La Divine, was derived from Rubel\u2019s Undersea Flower clip of turquoises, rubies and diamonds.", "answer": "John Rubel", "sentence": "Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me.", "paragraph_sentence": "Success brought a private clientele and the Rubels opened stores on Fifth Avenue and in Palm Beach, Fla. But, by the mid-1950s, the boutiques had closed. The last vestiges of their fame are the vintage pieces that turn up for auction occasionally at Sotheby\u2019s, Christie\u2019s and Bonhams. Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me. Inspired by the shapes and bold colors of Rubel Fr\u00e8res style, the 18 pieces in the collection are made of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, blue and pink sapphires and blue-green tourmalines. \u201cI call it dancing jewelry\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s very colorful, very joyful with touches of Art Deco style.\u201d John Rubel\u2019s Modernist-style Rouleau bracelet of curved gold and blue and pink sapphires inspired Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel\u2019s Ginger ring, named for Ginger Rogers, which the buyer can have pav\u00e9d with diamonds, emeralds, or sapphires. The Mozambique ruby and diamond ring, named La Divine, was derived from Rubel\u2019s Undersea Flower clip of turquoises, rubies and diamonds.", "paragraph_answer": "Success brought a private clientele and the Rubels opened stores on Fifth Avenue and in Palm Beach, Fla. But, by the mid-1950s, the boutiques had closed. The last vestiges of their fame are the vintage pieces that turn up for auction occasionally at Sotheby\u2019s, Christie\u2019s and Bonhams. Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me. Inspired by the shapes and bold colors of Rubel Fr\u00e8res style, the 18 pieces in the collection are made of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, blue and pink sapphires and blue-green tourmalines. \u201cI call it dancing jewelry\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s very colorful, very joyful with touches of Art Deco style.\u201d John Rubel\u2019s Modernist-style Rouleau bracelet of curved gold and blue and pink sapphires inspired Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel\u2019s Ginger ring, named for Ginger Rogers, which the buyer can have pav\u00e9d with diamonds, emeralds, or sapphires. The Mozambique ruby and diamond ring, named La Divine, was derived from Rubel\u2019s Undersea Flower clip of turquoises, rubies and diamonds.", "sentence_answer": "Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me."} +{"question": "How many pieces are there in the collection?", "paragraph": "Success brought a private clientele and the Rubels opened stores on Fifth Avenue and in Palm Beach, Fla. But, by the mid-1950s, the boutiques had closed. The last vestiges of their fame are the vintage pieces that turn up for auction occasionally at Sotheby\u2019s, Christie\u2019s and Bonhams. Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me. Inspired by the shapes and bold colors of Rubel Fr\u00e8res style, the 18 pieces in the collection are made of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, blue and pink sapphires and blue-green tourmalines. \u201cI call it dancing jewelry\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s very colorful, very joyful with touches of Art Deco style.\u201d John Rubel\u2019s Modernist-style Rouleau bracelet of curved gold and blue and pink sapphires inspired Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel\u2019s Ginger ring, named for Ginger Rogers, which the buyer can have pav\u00e9d with diamonds, emeralds, or sapphires. The Mozambique ruby and diamond ring, named La Divine, was derived from Rubel\u2019s Undersea Flower clip of turquoises, rubies and diamonds.", "answer": "18", "sentence": "Inspired by the shapes and bold colors of Rubel Fr\u00e8res style, the 18 pieces in the collection are made of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, blue and pink sapphires and blue-green tourmalines.", "paragraph_sentence": "Success brought a private clientele and the Rubels opened stores on Fifth Avenue and in Palm Beach, Fla. But, by the mid-1950s, the boutiques had closed. The last vestiges of their fame are the vintage pieces that turn up for auction occasionally at Sotheby\u2019s, Christie\u2019s and Bonhams. Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me. Inspired by the shapes and bold colors of Rubel Fr\u00e8res style, the 18 pieces in the collection are made of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, blue and pink sapphires and blue-green tourmalines. \u201cI call it dancing jewelry\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s very colorful, very joyful with touches of Art Deco style.\u201d John Rubel\u2019s Modernist-style Rouleau bracelet of curved gold and blue and pink sapphires inspired Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel\u2019s Ginger ring, named for Ginger Rogers, which the buyer can have pav\u00e9d with diamonds, emeralds, or sapphires. The Mozambique ruby and diamond ring, named La Divine, was derived from Rubel\u2019s Undersea Flower clip of turquoises, rubies and diamonds.", "paragraph_answer": "Success brought a private clientele and the Rubels opened stores on Fifth Avenue and in Palm Beach, Fla. But, by the mid-1950s, the boutiques had closed. The last vestiges of their fame are the vintage pieces that turn up for auction occasionally at Sotheby\u2019s, Christie\u2019s and Bonhams. Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me. Inspired by the shapes and bold colors of Rubel Fr\u00e8res style, the 18 pieces in the collection are made of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, blue and pink sapphires and blue-green tourmalines. \u201cI call it dancing jewelry\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s very colorful, very joyful with touches of Art Deco style.\u201d John Rubel\u2019s Modernist-style Rouleau bracelet of curved gold and blue and pink sapphires inspired Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel\u2019s Ginger ring, named for Ginger Rogers, which the buyer can have pav\u00e9d with diamonds, emeralds, or sapphires. The Mozambique ruby and diamond ring, named La Divine, was derived from Rubel\u2019s Undersea Flower clip of turquoises, rubies and diamonds.", "sentence_answer": "Inspired by the shapes and bold colors of Rubel Fr\u00e8res style, the 18 pieces in the collection are made of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, blue and pink sapphires and blue-green tourmalines."} +{"question": "What is the name of the collection?", "paragraph": "Success brought a private clientele and the Rubels opened stores on Fifth Avenue and in Palm Beach, Fla. But, by the mid-1950s, the boutiques had closed. The last vestiges of their fame are the vintage pieces that turn up for auction occasionally at Sotheby\u2019s, Christie\u2019s and Bonhams. Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me. Inspired by the shapes and bold colors of Rubel Fr\u00e8res style, the 18 pieces in the collection are made of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, blue and pink sapphires and blue-green tourmalines. \u201cI call it dancing jewelry\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s very colorful, very joyful with touches of Art Deco style.\u201d John Rubel\u2019s Modernist-style Rouleau bracelet of curved gold and blue and pink sapphires inspired Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel\u2019s Ginger ring, named for Ginger Rogers, which the buyer can have pav\u00e9d with diamonds, emeralds, or sapphires. The Mozambique ruby and diamond ring, named La Divine, was derived from Rubel\u2019s Undersea Flower clip of turquoises, rubies and diamonds.", "answer": "La Boh\u00e8me", "sentence": "Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me .", "paragraph_sentence": "Success brought a private clientele and the Rubels opened stores on Fifth Avenue and in Palm Beach, Fla. But, by the mid-1950s, the boutiques had closed. The last vestiges of their fame are the vintage pieces that turn up for auction occasionally at Sotheby\u2019s, Christie\u2019s and Bonhams. Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me . Inspired by the shapes and bold colors of Rubel Fr\u00e8res style, the 18 pieces in the collection are made of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, blue and pink sapphires and blue-green tourmalines. \u201cI call it dancing jewelry\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s very colorful, very joyful with touches of Art Deco style.\u201d John Rubel\u2019s Modernist-style Rouleau bracelet of curved gold and blue and pink sapphires inspired Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel\u2019s Ginger ring, named for Ginger Rogers, which the buyer can have pav\u00e9d with diamonds, emeralds, or sapphires. The Mozambique ruby and diamond ring, named La Divine, was derived from Rubel\u2019s Undersea Flower clip of turquoises, rubies and diamonds.", "paragraph_answer": "Success brought a private clientele and the Rubels opened stores on Fifth Avenue and in Palm Beach, Fla. But, by the mid-1950s, the boutiques had closed. The last vestiges of their fame are the vintage pieces that turn up for auction occasionally at Sotheby\u2019s, Christie\u2019s and Bonhams. Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me . Inspired by the shapes and bold colors of Rubel Fr\u00e8res style, the 18 pieces in the collection are made of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, blue and pink sapphires and blue-green tourmalines. \u201cI call it dancing jewelry\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s very colorful, very joyful with touches of Art Deco style.\u201d John Rubel\u2019s Modernist-style Rouleau bracelet of curved gold and blue and pink sapphires inspired Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel\u2019s Ginger ring, named for Ginger Rogers, which the buyer can have pav\u00e9d with diamonds, emeralds, or sapphires. The Mozambique ruby and diamond ring, named La Divine, was derived from Rubel\u2019s Undersea Flower clip of turquoises, rubies and diamonds.", "sentence_answer": "Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me ."} +{"question": "Who was the Ginger ring named for?", "paragraph": "Success brought a private clientele and the Rubels opened stores on Fifth Avenue and in Palm Beach, Fla. But, by the mid-1950s, the boutiques had closed. The last vestiges of their fame are the vintage pieces that turn up for auction occasionally at Sotheby\u2019s, Christie\u2019s and Bonhams. Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me. Inspired by the shapes and bold colors of Rubel Fr\u00e8res style, the 18 pieces in the collection are made of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, blue and pink sapphires and blue-green tourmalines. \u201cI call it dancing jewelry\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s very colorful, very joyful with touches of Art Deco style.\u201d John Rubel\u2019s Modernist-style Rouleau bracelet of curved gold and blue and pink sapphires inspired Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel\u2019s Ginger ring, named for Ginger Rogers, which the buyer can have pav\u00e9d with diamonds, emeralds, or sapphires. The Mozambique ruby and diamond ring, named La Divine, was derived from Rubel\u2019s Undersea Flower clip of turquoises, rubies and diamonds.", "answer": "Ginger Rogers", "sentence": "John Rubel\u2019s Modernist-style Rouleau bracelet of curved gold and blue and pink sapphires inspired Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel\u2019s Ginger ring, named for Ginger Rogers , which the buyer can have pav\u00e9d with diamonds, emeralds, or sapphires.", "paragraph_sentence": "Success brought a private clientele and the Rubels opened stores on Fifth Avenue and in Palm Beach, Fla. But, by the mid-1950s, the boutiques had closed. The last vestiges of their fame are the vintage pieces that turn up for auction occasionally at Sotheby\u2019s, Christie\u2019s and Bonhams. Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me. Inspired by the shapes and bold colors of Rubel Fr\u00e8res style, the 18 pieces in the collection are made of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, blue and pink sapphires and blue-green tourmalines. \u201cI call it dancing jewelry\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s very colorful, very joyful with touches of Art Deco style.\u201d John Rubel\u2019s Modernist-style Rouleau bracelet of curved gold and blue and pink sapphires inspired Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel\u2019s Ginger ring, named for Ginger Rogers , which the buyer can have pav\u00e9d with diamonds, emeralds, or sapphires. The Mozambique ruby and diamond ring, named La Divine, was derived from Rubel\u2019s Undersea Flower clip of turquoises, rubies and diamonds.", "paragraph_answer": "Success brought a private clientele and the Rubels opened stores on Fifth Avenue and in Palm Beach, Fla. But, by the mid-1950s, the boutiques had closed. The last vestiges of their fame are the vintage pieces that turn up for auction occasionally at Sotheby\u2019s, Christie\u2019s and Bonhams. Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me. Inspired by the shapes and bold colors of Rubel Fr\u00e8res style, the 18 pieces in the collection are made of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, blue and pink sapphires and blue-green tourmalines. \u201cI call it dancing jewelry\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s very colorful, very joyful with touches of Art Deco style.\u201d John Rubel\u2019s Modernist-style Rouleau bracelet of curved gold and blue and pink sapphires inspired Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel\u2019s Ginger ring, named for Ginger Rogers , which the buyer can have pav\u00e9d with diamonds, emeralds, or sapphires. The Mozambique ruby and diamond ring, named La Divine, was derived from Rubel\u2019s Undersea Flower clip of turquoises, rubies and diamonds.", "sentence_answer": "John Rubel\u2019s Modernist-style Rouleau bracelet of curved gold and blue and pink sapphires inspired Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel\u2019s Ginger ring, named for Ginger Rogers , which the buyer can have pav\u00e9d with diamonds, emeralds, or sapphires."} +{"question": "What is the name of the Mozambique ruby and diamond ring?", "paragraph": "Success brought a private clientele and the Rubels opened stores on Fifth Avenue and in Palm Beach, Fla. But, by the mid-1950s, the boutiques had closed. The last vestiges of their fame are the vintage pieces that turn up for auction occasionally at Sotheby\u2019s, Christie\u2019s and Bonhams. Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me. Inspired by the shapes and bold colors of Rubel Fr\u00e8res style, the 18 pieces in the collection are made of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, blue and pink sapphires and blue-green tourmalines. \u201cI call it dancing jewelry\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s very colorful, very joyful with touches of Art Deco style.\u201d John Rubel\u2019s Modernist-style Rouleau bracelet of curved gold and blue and pink sapphires inspired Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel\u2019s Ginger ring, named for Ginger Rogers, which the buyer can have pav\u00e9d with diamonds, emeralds, or sapphires. The Mozambique ruby and diamond ring, named La Divine, was derived from Rubel\u2019s Undersea Flower clip of turquoises, rubies and diamonds.", "answer": "La Divine", "sentence": "The Mozambique ruby and diamond ring, named La Divine , was derived from Rubel\u2019s Undersea Flower clip of turquoises, rubies and diamonds.", "paragraph_sentence": "Success brought a private clientele and the Rubels opened stores on Fifth Avenue and in Palm Beach, Fla. But, by the mid-1950s, the boutiques had closed. The last vestiges of their fame are the vintage pieces that turn up for auction occasionally at Sotheby\u2019s, Christie\u2019s and Bonhams. Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me. Inspired by the shapes and bold colors of Rubel Fr\u00e8res style, the 18 pieces in the collection are made of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, blue and pink sapphires and blue-green tourmalines. \u201cI call it dancing jewelry\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s very colorful, very joyful with touches of Art Deco style.\u201d John Rubel\u2019s Modernist-style Rouleau bracelet of curved gold and blue and pink sapphires inspired Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel\u2019s Ginger ring, named for Ginger Rogers, which the buyer can have pav\u00e9d with diamonds, emeralds, or sapphires. The Mozambique ruby and diamond ring, named La Divine , was derived from Rubel\u2019s Undersea Flower clip of turquoises, rubies and diamonds. ", "paragraph_answer": "Success brought a private clientele and the Rubels opened stores on Fifth Avenue and in Palm Beach, Fla. But, by the mid-1950s, the boutiques had closed. The last vestiges of their fame are the vintage pieces that turn up for auction occasionally at Sotheby\u2019s, Christie\u2019s and Bonhams. Since finding her grand uncles\u2019 archives, Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel has been working on designs and is now reviving the John Rubel brand with the collection La Boh\u00e8me. Inspired by the shapes and bold colors of Rubel Fr\u00e8res style, the 18 pieces in the collection are made of diamonds, rubies, emeralds, blue and pink sapphires and blue-green tourmalines. \u201cI call it dancing jewelry\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s very colorful, very joyful with touches of Art Deco style.\u201d John Rubel\u2019s Modernist-style Rouleau bracelet of curved gold and blue and pink sapphires inspired Ms. Mizrahi-Rubel\u2019s Ginger ring, named for Ginger Rogers, which the buyer can have pav\u00e9d with diamonds, emeralds, or sapphires. The Mozambique ruby and diamond ring, named La Divine , was derived from Rubel\u2019s Undersea Flower clip of turquoises, rubies and diamonds.", "sentence_answer": "The Mozambique ruby and diamond ring, named La Divine , was derived from Rubel\u2019s Undersea Flower clip of turquoises, rubies and diamonds."} +{"question": "What did the couple do in Amman, Jordan?", "paragraph": "They flirted awkwardly at a conference in Amman, Jordan, where they met in 2011. Then, in flurries of text messages over a few weeks, they discovered they both were interested in photography and astronomy and craved the Saudi rice dish kabsa. Their mobile phones both had the Backstreet Boys song with the lyrics: \u201cI don\u2019t care who you are/Where you\u2019re from/Or what you did/As long as you love me.\u201d They got engaged, exchanging rings and completing a contract to marry in an Islamic court. But theirs is a love unfulfilled. Dalia Shurrab, 32, lives here in the southern Gaza town of Khan Younis, and Rashed Sameer Faddah, 35, in the West Bank city of Nablus. Romance is not among the humanitarian reasons for which Israel allows Palestinians to travel from here to there. Now, the couple have started a Facebook campaign calling on President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority to \u201cDeliver the Bride to the Groom.\u201d \u201cI have the love of my life \u2014 he\u2019s really warm and kind, he always tries to make me happy, he\u2019s proud of me,\u201d Ms. Shurrab said, blushing and giggling as she shared their story. \u201cWhen we cannot achieve what we are dreaming of, it dies slowly inside of us.\u201d", "answer": "They flirted awkwardly at a conference", "sentence": "They flirted awkwardly at a conference in Amman, Jordan, where they met in 2011.", "paragraph_sentence": " They flirted awkwardly at a conference in Amman, Jordan, where they met in 2011. Then, in flurries of text messages over a few weeks, they discovered they both were interested in photography and astronomy and craved the Saudi rice dish kabsa. Their mobile phones both had the Backstreet Boys song with the lyrics: \u201cI don\u2019t care who you are/Where you\u2019re from/ Or what you did/As long as you love me.\u201d They got engaged, exchanging rings and completing a contract to marry in an Islamic court. But theirs is a love unfulfilled. Dalia Shurrab, 32, lives here in the southern Gaza town of Khan Younis, and Rashed Sameer Faddah, 35, in the West Bank city of Nablus. Romance is not among the humanitarian reasons for which Israel allows Palestinians to travel from here to there. Now, the couple have started a Facebook campaign calling on President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority to \u201cDeliver the Bride to the Groom.\u201d \u201cI have the love of my life \u2014 he\u2019s really warm and kind, he always tries to make me happy, he\u2019s proud of me,\u201d Ms. Shurrab said, blushing and giggling as she shared their story. \u201cWhen we cannot achieve what we are dreaming of, it dies slowly inside of us.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " They flirted awkwardly at a conference in Amman, Jordan, where they met in 2011. Then, in flurries of text messages over a few weeks, they discovered they both were interested in photography and astronomy and craved the Saudi rice dish kabsa. Their mobile phones both had the Backstreet Boys song with the lyrics: \u201cI don\u2019t care who you are/Where you\u2019re from/Or what you did/As long as you love me.\u201d They got engaged, exchanging rings and completing a contract to marry in an Islamic court. But theirs is a love unfulfilled. Dalia Shurrab, 32, lives here in the southern Gaza town of Khan Younis, and Rashed Sameer Faddah, 35, in the West Bank city of Nablus. Romance is not among the humanitarian reasons for which Israel allows Palestinians to travel from here to there. Now, the couple have started a Facebook campaign calling on President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority to \u201cDeliver the Bride to the Groom.\u201d \u201cI have the love of my life \u2014 he\u2019s really warm and kind, he always tries to make me happy, he\u2019s proud of me,\u201d Ms. Shurrab said, blushing and giggling as she shared their story. \u201cWhen we cannot achieve what we are dreaming of, it dies slowly inside of us.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " They flirted awkwardly at a conference in Amman, Jordan, where they met in 2011."} +{"question": "What did the couples phones have in common musically?", "paragraph": "They flirted awkwardly at a conference in Amman, Jordan, where they met in 2011. Then, in flurries of text messages over a few weeks, they discovered they both were interested in photography and astronomy and craved the Saudi rice dish kabsa. Their mobile phones both had the Backstreet Boys song with the lyrics: \u201cI don\u2019t care who you are/Where you\u2019re from/Or what you did/As long as you love me.\u201d They got engaged, exchanging rings and completing a contract to marry in an Islamic court. But theirs is a love unfulfilled. Dalia Shurrab, 32, lives here in the southern Gaza town of Khan Younis, and Rashed Sameer Faddah, 35, in the West Bank city of Nablus. Romance is not among the humanitarian reasons for which Israel allows Palestinians to travel from here to there. Now, the couple have started a Facebook campaign calling on President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority to \u201cDeliver the Bride to the Groom.\u201d \u201cI have the love of my life \u2014 he\u2019s really warm and kind, he always tries to make me happy, he\u2019s proud of me,\u201d Ms. Shurrab said, blushing and giggling as she shared their story. \u201cWhen we cannot achieve what we are dreaming of, it dies slowly inside of us.\u201d", "answer": "both had the Backstreet Boys song with the lyrics: \u201cI don\u2019t care who you are/Where you\u2019re from/Or what you did/As long as you love me.\u201d", "sentence": "Their mobile phones both had the Backstreet Boys song with the lyrics: \u201cI don\u2019t care who you are/Where you\u2019re from/Or what you did/As long as you love me.\u201d They got engaged, exchanging rings and completing a contract to marry in an Islamic court.", "paragraph_sentence": "They flirted awkwardly at a conference in Amman, Jordan, where they met in 2011. Then, in flurries of text messages over a few weeks, they discovered they both were interested in photography and astronomy and craved the Saudi rice dish kabsa. Their mobile phones both had the Backstreet Boys song with the lyrics: \u201cI don\u2019t care who you are/Where you\u2019re from/Or what you did/As long as you love me.\u201d They got engaged, exchanging rings and completing a contract to marry in an Islamic court. But theirs is a love unfulfilled. Dalia Shurrab, 32, lives here in the southern Gaza town of Khan Younis, and Rashed Sameer Faddah, 35, in the West Bank city of Nablus. Romance is not among the humanitarian reasons for which Israel allows Palestinians to travel from here to there. Now, the couple have started a Facebook campaign calling on President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority to \u201cDeliver the Bride to the Groom.\u201d \u201cI have the love of my life \u2014 he\u2019s really warm and kind, he always tries to make me happy, he\u2019s proud of me,\u201d Ms. Shurrab said, blushing and giggling as she shared their story. \u201cWhen we cannot achieve what we are dreaming of, it dies slowly inside of us.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "They flirted awkwardly at a conference in Amman, Jordan, where they met in 2011. Then, in flurries of text messages over a few weeks, they discovered they both were interested in photography and astronomy and craved the Saudi rice dish kabsa. Their mobile phones both had the Backstreet Boys song with the lyrics: \u201cI don\u2019t care who you are/Where you\u2019re from/Or what you did/As long as you love me.\u201d They got engaged, exchanging rings and completing a contract to marry in an Islamic court. But theirs is a love unfulfilled. Dalia Shurrab, 32, lives here in the southern Gaza town of Khan Younis, and Rashed Sameer Faddah, 35, in the West Bank city of Nablus. Romance is not among the humanitarian reasons for which Israel allows Palestinians to travel from here to there. Now, the couple have started a Facebook campaign calling on President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority to \u201cDeliver the Bride to the Groom.\u201d \u201cI have the love of my life \u2014 he\u2019s really warm and kind, he always tries to make me happy, he\u2019s proud of me,\u201d Ms. Shurrab said, blushing and giggling as she shared their story. \u201cWhen we cannot achieve what we are dreaming of, it dies slowly inside of us.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Their mobile phones both had the Backstreet Boys song with the lyrics: \u201cI don\u2019t care who you are/Where you\u2019re from/Or what you did/As long as you love me.\u201d They got engaged, exchanging rings and completing a contract to marry in an Islamic court."} +{"question": "What faith did the couple marry in?", "paragraph": "They flirted awkwardly at a conference in Amman, Jordan, where they met in 2011. Then, in flurries of text messages over a few weeks, they discovered they both were interested in photography and astronomy and craved the Saudi rice dish kabsa. Their mobile phones both had the Backstreet Boys song with the lyrics: \u201cI don\u2019t care who you are/Where you\u2019re from/Or what you did/As long as you love me.\u201d They got engaged, exchanging rings and completing a contract to marry in an Islamic court. But theirs is a love unfulfilled. Dalia Shurrab, 32, lives here in the southern Gaza town of Khan Younis, and Rashed Sameer Faddah, 35, in the West Bank city of Nablus. Romance is not among the humanitarian reasons for which Israel allows Palestinians to travel from here to there. Now, the couple have started a Facebook campaign calling on President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority to \u201cDeliver the Bride to the Groom.\u201d \u201cI have the love of my life \u2014 he\u2019s really warm and kind, he always tries to make me happy, he\u2019s proud of me,\u201d Ms. Shurrab said, blushing and giggling as she shared their story. \u201cWhen we cannot achieve what we are dreaming of, it dies slowly inside of us.\u201d", "answer": "Islam", "sentence": "They got engaged, exchanging rings and completing a contract to marry in an Islam ic court.", "paragraph_sentence": "They flirted awkwardly at a conference in Amman, Jordan, where they met in 2011. Then, in flurries of text messages over a few weeks, they discovered they both were interested in photography and astronomy and craved the Saudi rice dish kabsa. Their mobile phones both had the Backstreet Boys song with the lyrics: \u201cI don\u2019t care who you are/Where you\u2019re from/ Or what you did/As long as you love me.\u201d They got engaged, exchanging rings and completing a contract to marry in an Islam ic court. But theirs is a love unfulfilled. Dalia Shurrab, 32, lives here in the southern Gaza town of Khan Younis, and Rashed Sameer Faddah, 35, in the West Bank city of Nablus. Romance is not among the humanitarian reasons for which Israel allows Palestinians to travel from here to there. Now, the couple have started a Facebook campaign calling on President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority to \u201cDeliver the Bride to the Groom.\u201d \u201cI have the love of my life \u2014 he\u2019s really warm and kind, he always tries to make me happy, he\u2019s proud of me,\u201d Ms. Shurrab said, blushing and giggling as she shared their story. \u201cWhen we cannot achieve what we are dreaming of, it dies slowly inside of us.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "They flirted awkwardly at a conference in Amman, Jordan, where they met in 2011. Then, in flurries of text messages over a few weeks, they discovered they both were interested in photography and astronomy and craved the Saudi rice dish kabsa. Their mobile phones both had the Backstreet Boys song with the lyrics: \u201cI don\u2019t care who you are/Where you\u2019re from/Or what you did/As long as you love me.\u201d They got engaged, exchanging rings and completing a contract to marry in an Islam ic court. But theirs is a love unfulfilled. Dalia Shurrab, 32, lives here in the southern Gaza town of Khan Younis, and Rashed Sameer Faddah, 35, in the West Bank city of Nablus. Romance is not among the humanitarian reasons for which Israel allows Palestinians to travel from here to there. Now, the couple have started a Facebook campaign calling on President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority to \u201cDeliver the Bride to the Groom.\u201d \u201cI have the love of my life \u2014 he\u2019s really warm and kind, he always tries to make me happy, he\u2019s proud of me,\u201d Ms. Shurrab said, blushing and giggling as she shared their story. \u201cWhen we cannot achieve what we are dreaming of, it dies slowly inside of us.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "They got engaged, exchanging rings and completing a contract to marry in an Islam ic court."} +{"question": "Who keeps the couple separated?", "paragraph": "They flirted awkwardly at a conference in Amman, Jordan, where they met in 2011. Then, in flurries of text messages over a few weeks, they discovered they both were interested in photography and astronomy and craved the Saudi rice dish kabsa. Their mobile phones both had the Backstreet Boys song with the lyrics: \u201cI don\u2019t care who you are/Where you\u2019re from/Or what you did/As long as you love me.\u201d They got engaged, exchanging rings and completing a contract to marry in an Islamic court. But theirs is a love unfulfilled. Dalia Shurrab, 32, lives here in the southern Gaza town of Khan Younis, and Rashed Sameer Faddah, 35, in the West Bank city of Nablus. Romance is not among the humanitarian reasons for which Israel allows Palestinians to travel from here to there. Now, the couple have started a Facebook campaign calling on President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority to \u201cDeliver the Bride to the Groom.\u201d \u201cI have the love of my life \u2014 he\u2019s really warm and kind, he always tries to make me happy, he\u2019s proud of me,\u201d Ms. Shurrab said, blushing and giggling as she shared their story. \u201cWhen we cannot achieve what we are dreaming of, it dies slowly inside of us.\u201d", "answer": "Israel", "sentence": "Romance is not among the humanitarian reasons for which Israel allows Palestinians to travel from here to there.", "paragraph_sentence": "They flirted awkwardly at a conference in Amman, Jordan, where they met in 2011. Then, in flurries of text messages over a few weeks, they discovered they both were interested in photography and astronomy and craved the Saudi rice dish kabsa. Their mobile phones both had the Backstreet Boys song with the lyrics: \u201cI don\u2019t care who you are/Where you\u2019re from/ Or what you did/As long as you love me.\u201d They got engaged, exchanging rings and completing a contract to marry in an Islamic court. But theirs is a love unfulfilled. Dalia Shurrab, 32, lives here in the southern Gaza town of Khan Younis, and Rashed Sameer Faddah, 35, in the West Bank city of Nablus. Romance is not among the humanitarian reasons for which Israel allows Palestinians to travel from here to there. Now, the couple have started a Facebook campaign calling on President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority to \u201cDeliver the Bride to the Groom.\u201d \u201cI have the love of my life \u2014 he\u2019s really warm and kind, he always tries to make me happy, he\u2019s proud of me,\u201d Ms. Shurrab said, blushing and giggling as she shared their story. \u201cWhen we cannot achieve what we are dreaming of, it dies slowly inside of us.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "They flirted awkwardly at a conference in Amman, Jordan, where they met in 2011. Then, in flurries of text messages over a few weeks, they discovered they both were interested in photography and astronomy and craved the Saudi rice dish kabsa. Their mobile phones both had the Backstreet Boys song with the lyrics: \u201cI don\u2019t care who you are/Where you\u2019re from/Or what you did/As long as you love me.\u201d They got engaged, exchanging rings and completing a contract to marry in an Islamic court. But theirs is a love unfulfilled. Dalia Shurrab, 32, lives here in the southern Gaza town of Khan Younis, and Rashed Sameer Faddah, 35, in the West Bank city of Nablus. Romance is not among the humanitarian reasons for which Israel allows Palestinians to travel from here to there. Now, the couple have started a Facebook campaign calling on President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority to \u201cDeliver the Bride to the Groom.\u201d \u201cI have the love of my life \u2014 he\u2019s really warm and kind, he always tries to make me happy, he\u2019s proud of me,\u201d Ms. Shurrab said, blushing and giggling as she shared their story. \u201cWhen we cannot achieve what we are dreaming of, it dies slowly inside of us.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Romance is not among the humanitarian reasons for which Israel allows Palestinians to travel from here to there."} +{"question": "Who are the couple trying to reason with?", "paragraph": "Ms. Shurrab says she is focusing her appeals on Mr. Abbas, not Israel, because \u201che\u2019s responsible for the Palestinian people.\u201d She imagines that Palestinian officials could somehow intervene on her behalf since they coordinate with Israel on security issues. Nabil Abu Rudeineh, Mr. Abbas\u2019s spokesman, did not return a text message. The president\u2019s media department did not respond to an email inquiry. Xavier Abu Eid of the Palestine Liberation Organization, which Mr. Abbas also heads, said in an email that the couple was in \u201can awful situation that reflects the nightmare that thousands of Palestinian families have due to Israeli apartheid policies,\u201d which \u201chave been dramatically radicalized in the last few years.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Abbas", "sentence": "Ms. Shurrab says she is focusing her appeals on Mr. Abbas , not Israel, because \u201che\u2019s responsible for the Palestinian people.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Shurrab says she is focusing her appeals on Mr. Abbas , not Israel, because \u201che\u2019s responsible for the Palestinian people.\u201d She imagines that Palestinian officials could somehow intervene on her behalf since they coordinate with Israel on security issues. Nabil Abu Rudeineh, Mr. Abbas\u2019s spokesman, did not return a text message. The president\u2019s media department did not respond to an email inquiry. Xavier Abu Eid of the Palestine Liberation Organization, which Mr. Abbas also heads, said in an email that the couple was in \u201can awful situation that reflects the nightmare that thousands of Palestinian families have due to Israeli apartheid policies,\u201d which \u201chave been dramatically radicalized in the last few years.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Shurrab says she is focusing her appeals on Mr. Abbas , not Israel, because \u201che\u2019s responsible for the Palestinian people.\u201d She imagines that Palestinian officials could somehow intervene on her behalf since they coordinate with Israel on security issues. Nabil Abu Rudeineh, Mr. Abbas\u2019s spokesman, did not return a text message. The president\u2019s media department did not respond to an email inquiry. Xavier Abu Eid of the Palestine Liberation Organization, which Mr. Abbas also heads, said in an email that the couple was in \u201can awful situation that reflects the nightmare that thousands of Palestinian families have due to Israeli apartheid policies,\u201d which \u201chave been dramatically radicalized in the last few years.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Shurrab says she is focusing her appeals on Mr. Abbas , not Israel, because \u201che\u2019s responsible for the Palestinian people.\u201d"} +{"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."} +{"question": "What has happened with Israel's methods?", "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": "\u201chave been dramatically radicalized in the last few years.\u201d", "sentence": "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_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": "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 "} +{"question": "Why do the couple try to talk to 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": "\u201che\u2019s responsible for the Palestinian people.\u201d", "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.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Shurrab says she is focusing her appeals on Mr. Abbas, not Israel, because \u201che\u2019s responsible for the Palestinian people.\u201d She imagines that Palestinian officials could somehow intervene on her behalf since they coordinate with Israel on security issues. Nabil Abu Rudeineh, Mr. Abbas\u2019s spokesman, did not return a text message. The president\u2019s media department did not respond to an email inquiry. Xavier Abu Eid of the Palestine Liberation Organization, which Mr. Abbas also heads, said in an email that the couple was in \u201can awful situation that reflects the nightmare that thousands of Palestinian families have due to Israeli apartheid policies,\u201d which \u201chave been dramatically radicalized in the last few years.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Shurrab says she is focusing her appeals on Mr. Abbas, not Israel, because \u201che\u2019s responsible for the Palestinian people.\u201d She imagines that Palestinian officials could somehow intervene on her behalf since they coordinate with Israel on security issues. Nabil Abu Rudeineh, Mr. Abbas\u2019s spokesman, did not return a text message. The president\u2019s media department did not respond to an email inquiry. Xavier Abu Eid of the Palestine Liberation Organization, which Mr. Abbas also heads, said in an email that the couple was in \u201can awful situation that reflects the nightmare that thousands of Palestinian families have due to Israeli apartheid policies,\u201d which \u201chave been dramatically radicalized in the last few years.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Shurrab says she is focusing her appeals on Mr. Abbas, not Israel, because \u201che\u2019s responsible for the Palestinian people.\u201d She imagines that Palestinian officials could somehow intervene on her behalf since they coordinate with Israel on security issues."} +{"question": "What shift is more pressing in Europe than any other major region except Japan?", "paragraph": "The demographic shift is more pressing in Europe than almost any other major region, save Japan. There are an estimated 28 Europeans 65 or older for every 100 residents ages 20 to 64, almost twice the world average, according to the United Nations, and compared with 24.7 for the United States. By the end of the century, the United Nations expects the European figure to double. Such trends will transform societies, potentially reducing economic growth and increasing stress on public pension systems and requiring more elder care. Japan already faces existential questions in a country where adult diaper sales are beginning to eclipse those of baby diapers.", "answer": "demographic", "sentence": "The demographic shift is more pressing in Europe than almost any other major region, save Japan.", "paragraph_sentence": " The demographic shift is more pressing in Europe than almost any other major region, save Japan. There are an estimated 28 Europeans 65 or older for every 100 residents ages 20 to 64, almost twice the world average, according to the United Nations, and compared with 24.7 for the United States. By the end of the century, the United Nations expects the European figure to double. Such trends will transform societies, potentially reducing economic growth and increasing stress on public pension systems and requiring more elder care. Japan already faces existential questions in a country where adult diaper sales are beginning to eclipse those of baby diapers.", "paragraph_answer": "The demographic shift is more pressing in Europe than almost any other major region, save Japan. There are an estimated 28 Europeans 65 or older for every 100 residents ages 20 to 64, almost twice the world average, according to the United Nations, and compared with 24.7 for the United States. By the end of the century, the United Nations expects the European figure to double. Such trends will transform societies, potentially reducing economic growth and increasing stress on public pension systems and requiring more elder care. Japan already faces existential questions in a country where adult diaper sales are beginning to eclipse those of baby diapers.", "sentence_answer": "The demographic shift is more pressing in Europe than almost any other major region, save Japan."} +{"question": "How many Europeans 65 or older are there for every 100 residents aged 20 to 64?", "paragraph": "The demographic shift is more pressing in Europe than almost any other major region, save Japan. There are an estimated 28 Europeans 65 or older for every 100 residents ages 20 to 64, almost twice the world average, according to the United Nations, and compared with 24.7 for the United States. By the end of the century, the United Nations expects the European figure to double. Such trends will transform societies, potentially reducing economic growth and increasing stress on public pension systems and requiring more elder care. Japan already faces existential questions in a country where adult diaper sales are beginning to eclipse those of baby diapers.", "answer": "28", "sentence": "There are an estimated 28 Europeans 65 or older for every 100 residents ages 20 to 64, almost twice the world average, according to the United Nations, and compared with 24.7 for the United States.", "paragraph_sentence": "The demographic shift is more pressing in Europe than almost any other major region, save Japan. There are an estimated 28 Europeans 65 or older for every 100 residents ages 20 to 64, almost twice the world average, according to the United Nations, and compared with 24.7 for the United States. By the end of the century, the United Nations expects the European figure to double. Such trends will transform societies, potentially reducing economic growth and increasing stress on public pension systems and requiring more elder care. Japan already faces existential questions in a country where adult diaper sales are beginning to eclipse those of baby diapers.", "paragraph_answer": "The demographic shift is more pressing in Europe than almost any other major region, save Japan. There are an estimated 28 Europeans 65 or older for every 100 residents ages 20 to 64, almost twice the world average, according to the United Nations, and compared with 24.7 for the United States. By the end of the century, the United Nations expects the European figure to double. Such trends will transform societies, potentially reducing economic growth and increasing stress on public pension systems and requiring more elder care. Japan already faces existential questions in a country where adult diaper sales are beginning to eclipse those of baby diapers.", "sentence_answer": "There are an estimated 28 Europeans 65 or older for every 100 residents ages 20 to 64, almost twice the world average, according to the United Nations, and compared with 24.7 for the United States."} +{"question": "The United Nations expects the European figure to do what by the end of the century?", "paragraph": "The demographic shift is more pressing in Europe than almost any other major region, save Japan. There are an estimated 28 Europeans 65 or older for every 100 residents ages 20 to 64, almost twice the world average, according to the United Nations, and compared with 24.7 for the United States. By the end of the century, the United Nations expects the European figure to double. Such trends will transform societies, potentially reducing economic growth and increasing stress on public pension systems and requiring more elder care. Japan already faces existential questions in a country where adult diaper sales are beginning to eclipse those of baby diapers.", "answer": "double", "sentence": "By the end of the century, the United Nations expects the European figure to double .", "paragraph_sentence": "The demographic shift is more pressing in Europe than almost any other major region, save Japan. There are an estimated 28 Europeans 65 or older for every 100 residents ages 20 to 64, almost twice the world average, according to the United Nations, and compared with 24.7 for the United States. By the end of the century, the United Nations expects the European figure to double . Such trends will transform societies, potentially reducing economic growth and increasing stress on public pension systems and requiring more elder care. Japan already faces existential questions in a country where adult diaper sales are beginning to eclipse those of baby diapers.", "paragraph_answer": "The demographic shift is more pressing in Europe than almost any other major region, save Japan. There are an estimated 28 Europeans 65 or older for every 100 residents ages 20 to 64, almost twice the world average, according to the United Nations, and compared with 24.7 for the United States. By the end of the century, the United Nations expects the European figure to double . Such trends will transform societies, potentially reducing economic growth and increasing stress on public pension systems and requiring more elder care. Japan already faces existential questions in a country where adult diaper sales are beginning to eclipse those of baby diapers.", "sentence_answer": "By the end of the century, the United Nations expects the European figure to double ."} +{"question": "Who already faces existential questions about adult diaper sales beginning to overtake baby diapers?", "paragraph": "The demographic shift is more pressing in Europe than almost any other major region, save Japan. There are an estimated 28 Europeans 65 or older for every 100 residents ages 20 to 64, almost twice the world average, according to the United Nations, and compared with 24.7 for the United States. By the end of the century, the United Nations expects the European figure to double. Such trends will transform societies, potentially reducing economic growth and increasing stress on public pension systems and requiring more elder care. Japan already faces existential questions in a country where adult diaper sales are beginning to eclipse those of baby diapers.", "answer": "Japan", "sentence": "The demographic shift is more pressing in Europe than almost any other major region, save Japan .", "paragraph_sentence": " The demographic shift is more pressing in Europe than almost any other major region, save Japan . There are an estimated 28 Europeans 65 or older for every 100 residents ages 20 to 64, almost twice the world average, according to the United Nations, and compared with 24.7 for the United States. By the end of the century, the United Nations expects the European figure to double. Such trends will transform societies, potentially reducing economic growth and increasing stress on public pension systems and requiring more elder care. Japan already faces existential questions in a country where adult diaper sales are beginning to eclipse those of baby diapers.", "paragraph_answer": "The demographic shift is more pressing in Europe than almost any other major region, save Japan . There are an estimated 28 Europeans 65 or older for every 100 residents ages 20 to 64, almost twice the world average, according to the United Nations, and compared with 24.7 for the United States. By the end of the century, the United Nations expects the European figure to double. Such trends will transform societies, potentially reducing economic growth and increasing stress on public pension systems and requiring more elder care. Japan already faces existential questions in a country where adult diaper sales are beginning to eclipse those of baby diapers.", "sentence_answer": "The demographic shift is more pressing in Europe than almost any other major region, save Japan ."} +{"question": "Who faces an increased burden to sustain social programs?", "paragraph": "But there is not a consensus about the impact of demographics. Some see a natural maturing of developed societies. Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs. Productivity gains over time, though, can make up for such population stresses. Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor. But that is hardly an issue now for much of Europe, which is mired in high unemployment.", "answer": "active work force", "sentence": "Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs.", "paragraph_sentence": "But there is not a consensus about the impact of demographics. Some see a natural maturing of developed societies. Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs. Productivity gains over time, though, can make up for such population stresses. Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor. But that is hardly an issue now for much of Europe, which is mired in high unemployment.", "paragraph_answer": "But there is not a consensus about the impact of demographics. Some see a natural maturing of developed societies. Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs. Productivity gains over time, though, can make up for such population stresses. Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor. But that is hardly an issue now for much of Europe, which is mired in high unemployment.", "sentence_answer": "Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs."} +{"question": "Which country is mentioned to be facing a gap in skilled labor?", "paragraph": "But there is not a consensus about the impact of demographics. Some see a natural maturing of developed societies. Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs. Productivity gains over time, though, can make up for such population stresses. Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor. But that is hardly an issue now for much of Europe, which is mired in high unemployment.", "answer": "Germany", "sentence": "Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor.", "paragraph_sentence": "But there is not a consensus about the impact of demographics. Some see a natural maturing of developed societies. Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs. Productivity gains over time, though, can make up for such population stresses. Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor. But that is hardly an issue now for much of Europe, which is mired in high unemployment.", "paragraph_answer": "But there is not a consensus about the impact of demographics. Some see a natural maturing of developed societies. Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs. Productivity gains over time, though, can make up for such population stresses. Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor. But that is hardly an issue now for much of Europe, which is mired in high unemployment.", "sentence_answer": "Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor."} +{"question": "Labor shortages are partly due to declining what?", "paragraph": "But there is not a consensus about the impact of demographics. Some see a natural maturing of developed societies. Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs. Productivity gains over time, though, can make up for such population stresses. Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor. But that is hardly an issue now for much of Europe, which is mired in high unemployment.", "answer": "birthrates", "sentence": "Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor.", "paragraph_sentence": "But there is not a consensus about the impact of demographics. Some see a natural maturing of developed societies. Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs. Productivity gains over time, though, can make up for such population stresses. Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor. But that is hardly an issue now for much of Europe, which is mired in high unemployment.", "paragraph_answer": "But there is not a consensus about the impact of demographics. Some see a natural maturing of developed societies. Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs. Productivity gains over time, though, can make up for such population stresses. Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor. But that is hardly an issue now for much of Europe, which is mired in high unemployment.", "sentence_answer": "Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor."} +{"question": "Overtime what can make up for population stresses?", "paragraph": "But there is not a consensus about the impact of demographics. Some see a natural maturing of developed societies. Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs. Productivity gains over time, though, can make up for such population stresses. Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor. But that is hardly an issue now for much of Europe, which is mired in high unemployment.", "answer": "Productivity gains", "sentence": "Productivity gains over time, though, can make up for such population stresses.", "paragraph_sentence": "But there is not a consensus about the impact of demographics. Some see a natural maturing of developed societies. Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs. Productivity gains over time, though, can make up for such population stresses. Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor. But that is hardly an issue now for much of Europe, which is mired in high unemployment.", "paragraph_answer": "But there is not a consensus about the impact of demographics. Some see a natural maturing of developed societies. Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs. Productivity gains over time, though, can make up for such population stresses. Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor. But that is hardly an issue now for much of Europe, which is mired in high unemployment.", "sentence_answer": " Productivity gains over time, though, can make up for such population stresses."} +{"question": "A major current issue for Europe is a high what?", "paragraph": "But there is not a consensus about the impact of demographics. Some see a natural maturing of developed societies. Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs. Productivity gains over time, though, can make up for such population stresses. Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor. But that is hardly an issue now for much of Europe, which is mired in high unemployment.", "answer": "unemployment", "sentence": "But that is hardly an issue now for much of Europe, which is mired in high unemployment .", "paragraph_sentence": "But there is not a consensus about the impact of demographics. Some see a natural maturing of developed societies. Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs. Productivity gains over time, though, can make up for such population stresses. Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor. But that is hardly an issue now for much of Europe, which is mired in high unemployment . ", "paragraph_answer": "But there is not a consensus about the impact of demographics. Some see a natural maturing of developed societies. Others see disaster ahead, because with fewer workers and more retirees, the active work force faces an increased burden to sustain social programs. Productivity gains over time, though, can make up for such population stresses. Declining birthrates can also lead to labor shortages, and Germany has faced a gap in skilled labor. But that is hardly an issue now for much of Europe, which is mired in high unemployment .", "sentence_answer": "But that is hardly an issue now for much of Europe, which is mired in high unemployment ."} +{"question": "What kind of reckoning has Tunisia had with it's own past?", "paragraph": "As part of its remarkable journey toward democracy, Tunisia has embarked on a painful reckoning with its past. Since last year, its Truth and Dignity Commission, created by constitutional mandate in 2013, has been collecting harrowing accounts of torture suffered by thousands of Tunisians over nearly six decades, primarily under the regimes of the dictators Habib Bourguiba and Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali.", "answer": "painful", "sentence": "As part of its remarkable journey toward democracy, Tunisia has embarked on a painful reckoning with its past.", "paragraph_sentence": " As part of its remarkable journey toward democracy, Tunisia has embarked on a painful reckoning with its past. Since last year, its Truth and Dignity Commission, created by constitutional mandate in 2013, has been collecting harrowing accounts of torture suffered by thousands of Tunisians over nearly six decades, primarily under the regimes of the dictators Habib Bourguiba and Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali.", "paragraph_answer": "As part of its remarkable journey toward democracy, Tunisia has embarked on a painful reckoning with its past. Since last year, its Truth and Dignity Commission, created by constitutional mandate in 2013, has been collecting harrowing accounts of torture suffered by thousands of Tunisians over nearly six decades, primarily under the regimes of the dictators Habib Bourguiba and Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali.", "sentence_answer": "As part of its remarkable journey toward democracy, Tunisia has embarked on a painful reckoning with its past."} +{"question": "Tunisia has been on a road towards which form of government?", "paragraph": "As part of its remarkable journey toward democracy, Tunisia has embarked on a painful reckoning with its past. Since last year, its Truth and Dignity Commission, created by constitutional mandate in 2013, has been collecting harrowing accounts of torture suffered by thousands of Tunisians over nearly six decades, primarily under the regimes of the dictators Habib Bourguiba and Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali.", "answer": "democracy", "sentence": "As part of its remarkable journey toward democracy , Tunisia has embarked on a painful reckoning with its past.", "paragraph_sentence": " As part of its remarkable journey toward democracy , Tunisia has embarked on a painful reckoning with its past. Since last year, its Truth and Dignity Commission, created by constitutional mandate in 2013, has been collecting harrowing accounts of torture suffered by thousands of Tunisians over nearly six decades, primarily under the regimes of the dictators Habib Bourguiba and Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali.", "paragraph_answer": "As part of its remarkable journey toward democracy , Tunisia has embarked on a painful reckoning with its past. Since last year, its Truth and Dignity Commission, created by constitutional mandate in 2013, has been collecting harrowing accounts of torture suffered by thousands of Tunisians over nearly six decades, primarily under the regimes of the dictators Habib Bourguiba and Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali.", "sentence_answer": "As part of its remarkable journey toward democracy , Tunisia has embarked on a painful reckoning with its past."} +{"question": "What were the names of two dictators that many Tunisians suffered torture because of?", "paragraph": "As part of its remarkable journey toward democracy, Tunisia has embarked on a painful reckoning with its past. Since last year, its Truth and Dignity Commission, created by constitutional mandate in 2013, has been collecting harrowing accounts of torture suffered by thousands of Tunisians over nearly six decades, primarily under the regimes of the dictators Habib Bourguiba and Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali.", "answer": "dictators Habib Bourguiba and Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali.", "sentence": "Since last year, its Truth and Dignity Commission, created by constitutional mandate in 2013, has been collecting harrowing accounts of torture suffered by thousands of Tunisians over nearly six decades, primarily under the regimes of the dictators Habib Bourguiba and Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali.", "paragraph_sentence": "As part of its remarkable journey toward democracy, Tunisia has embarked on a painful reckoning with its past. Since last year, its Truth and Dignity Commission, created by constitutional mandate in 2013, has been collecting harrowing accounts of torture suffered by thousands of Tunisians over nearly six decades, primarily under the regimes of the dictators Habib Bourguiba and Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali. ", "paragraph_answer": "As part of its remarkable journey toward democracy, Tunisia has embarked on a painful reckoning with its past. Since last year, its Truth and Dignity Commission, created by constitutional mandate in 2013, has been collecting harrowing accounts of torture suffered by thousands of Tunisians over nearly six decades, primarily under the regimes of the dictators Habib Bourguiba and Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali. ", "sentence_answer": "Since last year, its Truth and Dignity Commission, created by constitutional mandate in 2013, has been collecting harrowing accounts of torture suffered by thousands of Tunisians over nearly six decades, primarily under the regimes of the dictators Habib Bourguiba and Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali. "} +{"question": "What Commission was created in 2013?", "paragraph": "As part of its remarkable journey toward democracy, Tunisia has embarked on a painful reckoning with its past. Since last year, its Truth and Dignity Commission, created by constitutional mandate in 2013, has been collecting harrowing accounts of torture suffered by thousands of Tunisians over nearly six decades, primarily under the regimes of the dictators Habib Bourguiba and Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali.", "answer": "Truth and Dignity Commission, created by constitutional mandate in 2013,", "sentence": "Since last year, its Truth and Dignity Commission, created by constitutional mandate in 2013, has been collecting harrowing accounts of torture suffered by thousands of Tunisians over nearly six decades, primarily under the regimes of the dictators Habib Bourguiba and Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali.", "paragraph_sentence": "As part of its remarkable journey toward democracy, Tunisia has embarked on a painful reckoning with its past. Since last year, its Truth and Dignity Commission, created by constitutional mandate in 2013, has been collecting harrowing accounts of torture suffered by thousands of Tunisians over nearly six decades, primarily under the regimes of the dictators Habib Bourguiba and Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali. ", "paragraph_answer": "As part of its remarkable journey toward democracy, Tunisia has embarked on a painful reckoning with its past. Since last year, its Truth and Dignity Commission, created by constitutional mandate in 2013, has been collecting harrowing accounts of torture suffered by thousands of Tunisians over nearly six decades, primarily under the regimes of the dictators Habib Bourguiba and Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali.", "sentence_answer": "Since last year, its Truth and Dignity Commission, created by constitutional mandate in 2013, has been collecting harrowing accounts of torture suffered by thousands of Tunisians over nearly six decades, primarily under the regimes of the dictators Habib Bourguiba and Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali."} +{"question": "What entities might the I.S.S. be biased toward?", "paragraph": "Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds, but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets. And every contest is unique. What is unusual about the recommendation is something I.S.S. acknowledged in its report: that DuPont is \u201cnot a broken company.\u201d The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz. In a memo to clients on the lessons in the DuPont fight, Mr. Lipton stated that I.S.S. and major shareholders would \u201cbe responsive to and support well-presented attacks on business strategy and operations\u201d even if the company was run by \u201can outstanding C.E.O. and board of directors.\u201d", "answer": "activist hedge funds", "sentence": "Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds , but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets.", "paragraph_sentence": " Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds , but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets. And every contest is unique. What is unusual about the recommendation is something I.S.S. acknowledged in its report: that DuPont is \u201cnot a broken company.\u201d The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz. In a memo to clients on the lessons in the DuPont fight, Mr. Lipton stated that I.S.S. and major shareholders would \u201cbe responsive to and support well-presented attacks on business strategy and operations\u201d even if the company was run by \u201can outstanding C.E.O. and board of directors.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds , but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets. And every contest is unique. What is unusual about the recommendation is something I.S.S. acknowledged in its report: that DuPont is \u201cnot a broken company.\u201d The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz. In a memo to clients on the lessons in the DuPont fight, Mr. Lipton stated that I.S.S. and major shareholders would \u201cbe responsive to and support well-presented attacks on business strategy and operations\u201d even if the company was run by \u201can outstanding C.E.O. and board of directors.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds , but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets."} +{"question": "What kinds of targets do hedge funds usually choose?", "paragraph": "Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds, but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets. And every contest is unique. What is unusual about the recommendation is something I.S.S. acknowledged in its report: that DuPont is \u201cnot a broken company.\u201d The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz. In a memo to clients on the lessons in the DuPont fight, Mr. Lipton stated that I.S.S. and major shareholders would \u201cbe responsive to and support well-presented attacks on business strategy and operations\u201d even if the company was run by \u201can outstanding C.E.O. and board of directors.\u201d", "answer": "struggling targets", "sentence": "Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds, but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets .", "paragraph_sentence": " Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds, but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets . And every contest is unique. What is unusual about the recommendation is something I.S.S. acknowledged in its report: that DuPont is \u201cnot a broken company.\u201d The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz. In a memo to clients on the lessons in the DuPont fight, Mr. Lipton stated that I.S.S. and major shareholders would \u201cbe responsive to and support well-presented attacks on business strategy and operations\u201d even if the company was run by \u201can outstanding C.E.O. and board of directors.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds, but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets . And every contest is unique. What is unusual about the recommendation is something I.S.S. acknowledged in its report: that DuPont is \u201cnot a broken company.\u201d The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz. In a memo to clients on the lessons in the DuPont fight, Mr. Lipton stated that I.S.S. and major shareholders would \u201cbe responsive to and support well-presented attacks on business strategy and operations\u201d even if the company was run by \u201can outstanding C.E.O. and board of directors.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds, but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets ."} +{"question": "Which company did the I.S.S. claim is not broken?", "paragraph": "Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds, but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets. And every contest is unique. What is unusual about the recommendation is something I.S.S. acknowledged in its report: that DuPont is \u201cnot a broken company.\u201d The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz. In a memo to clients on the lessons in the DuPont fight, Mr. Lipton stated that I.S.S. and major shareholders would \u201cbe responsive to and support well-presented attacks on business strategy and operations\u201d even if the company was run by \u201can outstanding C.E.O. and board of directors.\u201d", "answer": "DuPont", "sentence": "What is unusual about the recommendation is something I.S.S. acknowledged in its report: that DuPont is \u201cnot a broken company.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds, but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets. And every contest is unique. What is unusual about the recommendation is something I.S.S. acknowledged in its report: that DuPont is \u201cnot a broken company.\u201d The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz. In a memo to clients on the lessons in the DuPont fight, Mr. Lipton stated that I.S.S. and major shareholders would \u201cbe responsive to and support well-presented attacks on business strategy and operations\u201d even if the company was run by \u201can outstanding C.E.O. and board of directors.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds, but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets. And every contest is unique. What is unusual about the recommendation is something I.S.S. acknowledged in its report: that DuPont is \u201cnot a broken company.\u201d The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz. In a memo to clients on the lessons in the DuPont fight, Mr. Lipton stated that I.S.S. and major shareholders would \u201cbe responsive to and support well-presented attacks on business strategy and operations\u201d even if the company was run by \u201can outstanding C.E.O. and board of directors.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "What is unusual about the recommendation is something I.S.S. acknowledged in its report: that DuPont is \u201cnot a broken company.\u201d"} +{"question": "Which law firm does Martin Lipton work for?", "paragraph": "Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds, but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets. And every contest is unique. What is unusual about the recommendation is something I.S.S. acknowledged in its report: that DuPont is \u201cnot a broken company.\u201d The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz. In a memo to clients on the lessons in the DuPont fight, Mr. Lipton stated that I.S.S. and major shareholders would \u201cbe responsive to and support well-presented attacks on business strategy and operations\u201d even if the company was run by \u201can outstanding C.E.O. and board of directors.\u201d", "answer": "Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz", "sentence": "The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz .", "paragraph_sentence": "Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds, but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets. And every contest is unique. What is unusual about the recommendation is something I.S.S. acknowledged in its report: that DuPont is \u201cnot a broken company.\u201d The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz . In a memo to clients on the lessons in the DuPont fight, Mr. Lipton stated that I.S.S. and major shareholders would \u201cbe responsive to and support well-presented attacks on business strategy and operations\u201d even if the company was run by \u201can outstanding C.E.O. and board of directors.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds, but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets. And every contest is unique. What is unusual about the recommendation is something I.S.S. acknowledged in its report: that DuPont is \u201cnot a broken company.\u201d The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz . In a memo to clients on the lessons in the DuPont fight, Mr. Lipton stated that I.S.S. and major shareholders would \u201cbe responsive to and support well-presented attacks on business strategy and operations\u201d even if the company was run by \u201can outstanding C.E.O. and board of directors.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz ."} +{"question": "Who sent a memo to clients about lessons from the DuPont conflict?", "paragraph": "Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds, but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets. And every contest is unique. What is unusual about the recommendation is something I.S.S. acknowledged in its report: that DuPont is \u201cnot a broken company.\u201d The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz. In a memo to clients on the lessons in the DuPont fight, Mr. Lipton stated that I.S.S. and major shareholders would \u201cbe responsive to and support well-presented attacks on business strategy and operations\u201d even if the company was run by \u201can outstanding C.E.O. and board of directors.\u201d", "answer": "Martin Lipton", "sentence": "The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz.", "paragraph_sentence": "Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds, but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets. And every contest is unique. What is unusual about the recommendation is something I.S.S. acknowledged in its report: that DuPont is \u201cnot a broken company.\u201d The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz. In a memo to clients on the lessons in the DuPont fight, Mr. Lipton stated that I.S.S. and major shareholders would \u201cbe responsive to and support well-presented attacks on business strategy and operations\u201d even if the company was run by \u201can outstanding C.E.O. and board of directors.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Such a report may suggest that I.S.S. is biased in favor of the activist hedge funds, but this statistic may not be truly surprising because hedge funds tend to pick struggling targets. And every contest is unique. What is unusual about the recommendation is something I.S.S. acknowledged in its report: that DuPont is \u201cnot a broken company.\u201d The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz. In a memo to clients on the lessons in the DuPont fight, Mr. Lipton stated that I.S.S. and major shareholders would \u201cbe responsive to and support well-presented attacks on business strategy and operations\u201d even if the company was run by \u201can outstanding C.E.O. and board of directors.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The significance of the I.S.S. decision was perhaps best put by Martin Lipton of the law firm Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz."} +{"question": "How much money has Trian invested in DuPont?", "paragraph": "Trian, which has invested $1.7 billion in DuPont, disputes this and is putting forth an equally vigorous case that DuPont has underperformed. According to Trian, DuPont has repeatedly missed its long-term earnings targets. The firm attributes the rise in DuPont\u2019s stock price to market fluctuations and the influence of Trian\u2019s presence. It also notes that the company\u2019s 2015 earnings per share are expected to be below its 2011 numbers. Trian says that the company is also likely to miss its earnings forecast this year. Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts, as well as bad corporate governance practices. DuPont\u2019s acquisition of Danisco was a \u201cdisaster,\u201d and DuPont left about $6 billion on the table in the sale of its performance coatings business, Trian said.", "answer": "$1.7 billion", "sentence": "Trian, which has invested $1.7 billion in DuPont, disputes this and is putting forth an equally vigorous case that DuPont has underperformed.", "paragraph_sentence": " Trian, which has invested $1.7 billion in DuPont, disputes this and is putting forth an equally vigorous case that DuPont has underperformed. According to Trian, DuPont has repeatedly missed its long-term earnings targets. The firm attributes the rise in DuPont\u2019s stock price to market fluctuations and the influence of Trian\u2019s presence. It also notes that the company\u2019s 2015 earnings per share are expected to be below its 2011 numbers. Trian says that the company is also likely to miss its earnings forecast this year. Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts, as well as bad corporate governance practices. DuPont\u2019s acquisition of Danisco was a \u201cdisaster,\u201d and DuPont left about $6 billion on the table in the sale of its performance coatings business, Trian said.", "paragraph_answer": "Trian, which has invested $1.7 billion in DuPont, disputes this and is putting forth an equally vigorous case that DuPont has underperformed. According to Trian, DuPont has repeatedly missed its long-term earnings targets. The firm attributes the rise in DuPont\u2019s stock price to market fluctuations and the influence of Trian\u2019s presence. It also notes that the company\u2019s 2015 earnings per share are expected to be below its 2011 numbers. Trian says that the company is also likely to miss its earnings forecast this year. Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts, as well as bad corporate governance practices. DuPont\u2019s acquisition of Danisco was a \u201cdisaster,\u201d and DuPont left about $6 billion on the table in the sale of its performance coatings business, Trian said.", "sentence_answer": "Trian, which has invested $1.7 billion in DuPont, disputes this and is putting forth an equally vigorous case that DuPont has underperformed."} +{"question": "How has DuPont performed in regard to its earning targets?", "paragraph": "Trian, which has invested $1.7 billion in DuPont, disputes this and is putting forth an equally vigorous case that DuPont has underperformed. According to Trian, DuPont has repeatedly missed its long-term earnings targets. The firm attributes the rise in DuPont\u2019s stock price to market fluctuations and the influence of Trian\u2019s presence. It also notes that the company\u2019s 2015 earnings per share are expected to be below its 2011 numbers. Trian says that the company is also likely to miss its earnings forecast this year. Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts, as well as bad corporate governance practices. DuPont\u2019s acquisition of Danisco was a \u201cdisaster,\u201d and DuPont left about $6 billion on the table in the sale of its performance coatings business, Trian said.", "answer": "missed its long-term earnings targets", "sentence": "According to Trian, DuPont has repeatedly missed its long-term earnings targets .", "paragraph_sentence": "Trian, which has invested $1.7 billion in DuPont, disputes this and is putting forth an equally vigorous case that DuPont has underperformed. According to Trian, DuPont has repeatedly missed its long-term earnings targets . The firm attributes the rise in DuPont\u2019s stock price to market fluctuations and the influence of Trian\u2019s presence. It also notes that the company\u2019s 2015 earnings per share are expected to be below its 2011 numbers. Trian says that the company is also likely to miss its earnings forecast this year. Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts, as well as bad corporate governance practices. DuPont\u2019s acquisition of Danisco was a \u201cdisaster,\u201d and DuPont left about $6 billion on the table in the sale of its performance coatings business, Trian said.", "paragraph_answer": "Trian, which has invested $1.7 billion in DuPont, disputes this and is putting forth an equally vigorous case that DuPont has underperformed. According to Trian, DuPont has repeatedly missed its long-term earnings targets . The firm attributes the rise in DuPont\u2019s stock price to market fluctuations and the influence of Trian\u2019s presence. It also notes that the company\u2019s 2015 earnings per share are expected to be below its 2011 numbers. Trian says that the company is also likely to miss its earnings forecast this year. Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts, as well as bad corporate governance practices. DuPont\u2019s acquisition of Danisco was a \u201cdisaster,\u201d and DuPont left about $6 billion on the table in the sale of its performance coatings business, Trian said.", "sentence_answer": "According to Trian, DuPont has repeatedly missed its long-term earnings targets ."} +{"question": "How are DuPont's earnings in 2015 expected to compare to its 2011 earnings?", "paragraph": "Trian, which has invested $1.7 billion in DuPont, disputes this and is putting forth an equally vigorous case that DuPont has underperformed. According to Trian, DuPont has repeatedly missed its long-term earnings targets. The firm attributes the rise in DuPont\u2019s stock price to market fluctuations and the influence of Trian\u2019s presence. It also notes that the company\u2019s 2015 earnings per share are expected to be below its 2011 numbers. Trian says that the company is also likely to miss its earnings forecast this year. Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts, as well as bad corporate governance practices. DuPont\u2019s acquisition of Danisco was a \u201cdisaster,\u201d and DuPont left about $6 billion on the table in the sale of its performance coatings business, Trian said.", "answer": "below", "sentence": "It also notes that the company\u2019s 2015 earnings per share are expected to be below its 2011 numbers.", "paragraph_sentence": "Trian, which has invested $1.7 billion in DuPont, disputes this and is putting forth an equally vigorous case that DuPont has underperformed. According to Trian, DuPont has repeatedly missed its long-term earnings targets. The firm attributes the rise in DuPont\u2019s stock price to market fluctuations and the influence of Trian\u2019s presence. It also notes that the company\u2019s 2015 earnings per share are expected to be below its 2011 numbers. Trian says that the company is also likely to miss its earnings forecast this year. Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts, as well as bad corporate governance practices. DuPont\u2019s acquisition of Danisco was a \u201cdisaster,\u201d and DuPont left about $6 billion on the table in the sale of its performance coatings business, Trian said.", "paragraph_answer": "Trian, which has invested $1.7 billion in DuPont, disputes this and is putting forth an equally vigorous case that DuPont has underperformed. According to Trian, DuPont has repeatedly missed its long-term earnings targets. The firm attributes the rise in DuPont\u2019s stock price to market fluctuations and the influence of Trian\u2019s presence. It also notes that the company\u2019s 2015 earnings per share are expected to be below its 2011 numbers. Trian says that the company is also likely to miss its earnings forecast this year. Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts, as well as bad corporate governance practices. DuPont\u2019s acquisition of Danisco was a \u201cdisaster,\u201d and DuPont left about $6 billion on the table in the sale of its performance coatings business, Trian said.", "sentence_answer": "It also notes that the company\u2019s 2015 earnings per share are expected to be below its 2011 numbers."} +{"question": "DuPont may have unnecessarily large costs in which sectors?", "paragraph": "Trian, which has invested $1.7 billion in DuPont, disputes this and is putting forth an equally vigorous case that DuPont has underperformed. According to Trian, DuPont has repeatedly missed its long-term earnings targets. The firm attributes the rise in DuPont\u2019s stock price to market fluctuations and the influence of Trian\u2019s presence. It also notes that the company\u2019s 2015 earnings per share are expected to be below its 2011 numbers. Trian says that the company is also likely to miss its earnings forecast this year. Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts, as well as bad corporate governance practices. DuPont\u2019s acquisition of Danisco was a \u201cdisaster,\u201d and DuPont left about $6 billion on the table in the sale of its performance coatings business, Trian said.", "answer": "administrative and research and development efforts", "sentence": "Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts , as well as bad corporate governance practices.", "paragraph_sentence": "Trian, which has invested $1.7 billion in DuPont, disputes this and is putting forth an equally vigorous case that DuPont has underperformed. According to Trian, DuPont has repeatedly missed its long-term earnings targets. The firm attributes the rise in DuPont\u2019s stock price to market fluctuations and the influence of Trian\u2019s presence. It also notes that the company\u2019s 2015 earnings per share are expected to be below its 2011 numbers. Trian says that the company is also likely to miss its earnings forecast this year. Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts , as well as bad corporate governance practices. DuPont\u2019s acquisition of Danisco was a \u201cdisaster,\u201d and DuPont left about $6 billion on the table in the sale of its performance coatings business, Trian said.", "paragraph_answer": "Trian, which has invested $1.7 billion in DuPont, disputes this and is putting forth an equally vigorous case that DuPont has underperformed. According to Trian, DuPont has repeatedly missed its long-term earnings targets. The firm attributes the rise in DuPont\u2019s stock price to market fluctuations and the influence of Trian\u2019s presence. It also notes that the company\u2019s 2015 earnings per share are expected to be below its 2011 numbers. Trian says that the company is also likely to miss its earnings forecast this year. Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts , as well as bad corporate governance practices. DuPont\u2019s acquisition of Danisco was a \u201cdisaster,\u201d and DuPont left about $6 billion on the table in the sale of its performance coatings business, Trian said.", "sentence_answer": "Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts , as well as bad corporate governance practices."} +{"question": "What purchase made by DuPont was considered a bad move?", "paragraph": "Trian, which has invested $1.7 billion in DuPont, disputes this and is putting forth an equally vigorous case that DuPont has underperformed. According to Trian, DuPont has repeatedly missed its long-term earnings targets. The firm attributes the rise in DuPont\u2019s stock price to market fluctuations and the influence of Trian\u2019s presence. It also notes that the company\u2019s 2015 earnings per share are expected to be below its 2011 numbers. Trian says that the company is also likely to miss its earnings forecast this year. Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts, as well as bad corporate governance practices. DuPont\u2019s acquisition of Danisco was a \u201cdisaster,\u201d and DuPont left about $6 billion on the table in the sale of its performance coatings business, Trian said.", "answer": "acquisition of Danisco", "sentence": "DuPont\u2019s acquisition of Danisco was a \u201cdisaster,\u201d and DuPont left about $6 billion on the table in the sale of its performance coatings business, Trian said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Trian, which has invested $1.7 billion in DuPont, disputes this and is putting forth an equally vigorous case that DuPont has underperformed. According to Trian, DuPont has repeatedly missed its long-term earnings targets. The firm attributes the rise in DuPont\u2019s stock price to market fluctuations and the influence of Trian\u2019s presence. It also notes that the company\u2019s 2015 earnings per share are expected to be below its 2011 numbers. Trian says that the company is also likely to miss its earnings forecast this year. Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts, as well as bad corporate governance practices. DuPont\u2019s acquisition of Danisco was a \u201cdisaster,\u201d and DuPont left about $6 billion on the table in the sale of its performance coatings business, Trian said. ", "paragraph_answer": "Trian, which has invested $1.7 billion in DuPont, disputes this and is putting forth an equally vigorous case that DuPont has underperformed. According to Trian, DuPont has repeatedly missed its long-term earnings targets. The firm attributes the rise in DuPont\u2019s stock price to market fluctuations and the influence of Trian\u2019s presence. It also notes that the company\u2019s 2015 earnings per share are expected to be below its 2011 numbers. Trian says that the company is also likely to miss its earnings forecast this year. Trian also claims that DuPont has bloated costs in both administrative and research and development efforts, as well as bad corporate governance practices. DuPont\u2019s acquisition of Danisco was a \u201cdisaster,\u201d and DuPont left about $6 billion on the table in the sale of its performance coatings business, Trian said.", "sentence_answer": "DuPont\u2019s acquisition of Danisco was a \u201cdisaster,\u201d and DuPont left about $6 billion on the table in the sale of its performance coatings business, Trian said."} +{"question": "What did the I.S.S. find DuPont's growth margin to be?", "paragraph": "The proxy advisory firm chose its stance primarily on the basis of the measurement periods it picked. Instead of using DuPont\u2019s measurements, which went back to 2008, I.S.S. went back to 2007, subtracted the health and nutrition business (saying it is a new business) and excluded the effect of the commodity boom in ethylene. Under this measurement, I.S.S. found that DuPont\u2019s growth margin based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization was only 0.5 percent for each year over seven years. I.S.S. also seemed to base its recommendation on Trian\u2019s assertions that DuPont had excessive costs and governance issues, but the low margin growth seemed to be I.S.S.\u2019s chief concern. This is where DuPont shareholders are left: Depending on the measurement period, DuPont is either a growth machine or a laggard.", "answer": "0.5 percent", "sentence": "Under this measurement, I.S.S. found that DuPont\u2019s growth margin based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization was only 0.5 percent for each year over seven years.", "paragraph_sentence": "The proxy advisory firm chose its stance primarily on the basis of the measurement periods it picked. Instead of using DuPont\u2019s measurements, which went back to 2008, I.S.S. went back to 2007, subtracted the health and nutrition business (saying it is a new business) and excluded the effect of the commodity boom in ethylene. Under this measurement, I.S.S. found that DuPont\u2019s growth margin based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization was only 0.5 percent for each year over seven years. I.S.S. also seemed to base its recommendation on Trian\u2019s assertions that DuPont had excessive costs and governance issues, but the low margin growth seemed to be I.S.S.\u2019s chief concern. This is where DuPont shareholders are left: Depending on the measurement period, DuPont is either a growth machine or a laggard.", "paragraph_answer": "The proxy advisory firm chose its stance primarily on the basis of the measurement periods it picked. Instead of using DuPont\u2019s measurements, which went back to 2008, I.S.S. went back to 2007, subtracted the health and nutrition business (saying it is a new business) and excluded the effect of the commodity boom in ethylene. Under this measurement, I.S.S. found that DuPont\u2019s growth margin based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization was only 0.5 percent for each year over seven years. I.S.S. also seemed to base its recommendation on Trian\u2019s assertions that DuPont had excessive costs and governance issues, but the low margin growth seemed to be I.S.S.\u2019s chief concern. This is where DuPont shareholders are left: Depending on the measurement period, DuPont is either a growth machine or a laggard.", "sentence_answer": "Under this measurement, I.S.S. found that DuPont\u2019s growth margin based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization was only 0.5 percent for each year over seven years."} +{"question": "Over what period of time was DuPont's growth margin measured?", "paragraph": "The proxy advisory firm chose its stance primarily on the basis of the measurement periods it picked. Instead of using DuPont\u2019s measurements, which went back to 2008, I.S.S. went back to 2007, subtracted the health and nutrition business (saying it is a new business) and excluded the effect of the commodity boom in ethylene. Under this measurement, I.S.S. found that DuPont\u2019s growth margin based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization was only 0.5 percent for each year over seven years. I.S.S. also seemed to base its recommendation on Trian\u2019s assertions that DuPont had excessive costs and governance issues, but the low margin growth seemed to be I.S.S.\u2019s chief concern. This is where DuPont shareholders are left: Depending on the measurement period, DuPont is either a growth machine or a laggard.", "answer": "seven years", "sentence": "Under this measurement, I.S.S. found that DuPont\u2019s growth margin based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization was only 0.5 percent for each year over seven years .", "paragraph_sentence": "The proxy advisory firm chose its stance primarily on the basis of the measurement periods it picked. Instead of using DuPont\u2019s measurements, which went back to 2008, I.S.S. went back to 2007, subtracted the health and nutrition business (saying it is a new business) and excluded the effect of the commodity boom in ethylene. Under this measurement, I.S.S. found that DuPont\u2019s growth margin based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization was only 0.5 percent for each year over seven years . I.S.S. also seemed to base its recommendation on Trian\u2019s assertions that DuPont had excessive costs and governance issues, but the low margin growth seemed to be I.S.S.\u2019s chief concern. This is where DuPont shareholders are left: Depending on the measurement period, DuPont is either a growth machine or a laggard.", "paragraph_answer": "The proxy advisory firm chose its stance primarily on the basis of the measurement periods it picked. Instead of using DuPont\u2019s measurements, which went back to 2008, I.S.S. went back to 2007, subtracted the health and nutrition business (saying it is a new business) and excluded the effect of the commodity boom in ethylene. Under this measurement, I.S.S. found that DuPont\u2019s growth margin based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization was only 0.5 percent for each year over seven years . I.S.S. also seemed to base its recommendation on Trian\u2019s assertions that DuPont had excessive costs and governance issues, but the low margin growth seemed to be I.S.S.\u2019s chief concern. This is where DuPont shareholders are left: Depending on the measurement period, DuPont is either a growth machine or a laggard.", "sentence_answer": "Under this measurement, I.S.S. found that DuPont\u2019s growth margin based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization was only 0.5 percent for each year over seven years ."} +{"question": "What types of issues did Trian find DuPont to have?", "paragraph": "The proxy advisory firm chose its stance primarily on the basis of the measurement periods it picked. Instead of using DuPont\u2019s measurements, which went back to 2008, I.S.S. went back to 2007, subtracted the health and nutrition business (saying it is a new business) and excluded the effect of the commodity boom in ethylene. Under this measurement, I.S.S. found that DuPont\u2019s growth margin based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization was only 0.5 percent for each year over seven years. I.S.S. also seemed to base its recommendation on Trian\u2019s assertions that DuPont had excessive costs and governance issues, but the low margin growth seemed to be I.S.S.\u2019s chief concern. This is where DuPont shareholders are left: Depending on the measurement period, DuPont is either a growth machine or a laggard.", "answer": "excessive costs and governance issues", "sentence": "I.S.S. also seemed to base its recommendation on Trian\u2019s assertions that DuPont had excessive costs and governance issues , but the low margin growth seemed to be I.S.S.\u2019s chief concern.", "paragraph_sentence": "The proxy advisory firm chose its stance primarily on the basis of the measurement periods it picked. Instead of using DuPont\u2019s measurements, which went back to 2008, I.S.S. went back to 2007, subtracted the health and nutrition business (saying it is a new business) and excluded the effect of the commodity boom in ethylene. Under this measurement, I.S.S. found that DuPont\u2019s growth margin based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization was only 0.5 percent for each year over seven years. I.S.S. also seemed to base its recommendation on Trian\u2019s assertions that DuPont had excessive costs and governance issues , but the low margin growth seemed to be I.S.S.\u2019s chief concern. This is where DuPont shareholders are left: Depending on the measurement period, DuPont is either a growth machine or a laggard.", "paragraph_answer": "The proxy advisory firm chose its stance primarily on the basis of the measurement periods it picked. Instead of using DuPont\u2019s measurements, which went back to 2008, I.S.S. went back to 2007, subtracted the health and nutrition business (saying it is a new business) and excluded the effect of the commodity boom in ethylene. Under this measurement, I.S.S. found that DuPont\u2019s growth margin based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization was only 0.5 percent for each year over seven years. I.S.S. also seemed to base its recommendation on Trian\u2019s assertions that DuPont had excessive costs and governance issues , but the low margin growth seemed to be I.S.S.\u2019s chief concern. This is where DuPont shareholders are left: Depending on the measurement period, DuPont is either a growth machine or a laggard.", "sentence_answer": "I.S.S. also seemed to base its recommendation on Trian\u2019s assertions that DuPont had excessive costs and governance issues , but the low margin growth seemed to be I.S.S.\u2019s chief concern."} +{"question": "What was the head of I.S.S.'s main concern regarding DuPont?", "paragraph": "The proxy advisory firm chose its stance primarily on the basis of the measurement periods it picked. Instead of using DuPont\u2019s measurements, which went back to 2008, I.S.S. went back to 2007, subtracted the health and nutrition business (saying it is a new business) and excluded the effect of the commodity boom in ethylene. Under this measurement, I.S.S. found that DuPont\u2019s growth margin based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization was only 0.5 percent for each year over seven years. I.S.S. also seemed to base its recommendation on Trian\u2019s assertions that DuPont had excessive costs and governance issues, but the low margin growth seemed to be I.S.S.\u2019s chief concern. This is where DuPont shareholders are left: Depending on the measurement period, DuPont is either a growth machine or a laggard.", "answer": "low margin growth", "sentence": "I.S.S. also seemed to base its recommendation on Trian\u2019s assertions that DuPont had excessive costs and governance issues, but the low margin growth seemed to be I.S.S.\u2019s chief concern.", "paragraph_sentence": "The proxy advisory firm chose its stance primarily on the basis of the measurement periods it picked. Instead of using DuPont\u2019s measurements, which went back to 2008, I.S.S. went back to 2007, subtracted the health and nutrition business (saying it is a new business) and excluded the effect of the commodity boom in ethylene. Under this measurement, I.S.S. found that DuPont\u2019s growth margin based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization was only 0.5 percent for each year over seven years. I.S.S. also seemed to base its recommendation on Trian\u2019s assertions that DuPont had excessive costs and governance issues, but the low margin growth seemed to be I.S.S.\u2019s chief concern. This is where DuPont shareholders are left: Depending on the measurement period, DuPont is either a growth machine or a laggard.", "paragraph_answer": "The proxy advisory firm chose its stance primarily on the basis of the measurement periods it picked. Instead of using DuPont\u2019s measurements, which went back to 2008, I.S.S. went back to 2007, subtracted the health and nutrition business (saying it is a new business) and excluded the effect of the commodity boom in ethylene. Under this measurement, I.S.S. found that DuPont\u2019s growth margin based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization was only 0.5 percent for each year over seven years. I.S.S. also seemed to base its recommendation on Trian\u2019s assertions that DuPont had excessive costs and governance issues, but the low margin growth seemed to be I.S.S.\u2019s chief concern. This is where DuPont shareholders are left: Depending on the measurement period, DuPont is either a growth machine or a laggard.", "sentence_answer": "I.S.S. also seemed to base its recommendation on Trian\u2019s assertions that DuPont had excessive costs and governance issues, but the low margin growth seemed to be I.S.S.\u2019s chief concern."} +{"question": "What two possibilities are left for DuPont shareholders regarding the company?", "paragraph": "The proxy advisory firm chose its stance primarily on the basis of the measurement periods it picked. Instead of using DuPont\u2019s measurements, which went back to 2008, I.S.S. went back to 2007, subtracted the health and nutrition business (saying it is a new business) and excluded the effect of the commodity boom in ethylene. Under this measurement, I.S.S. found that DuPont\u2019s growth margin based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization was only 0.5 percent for each year over seven years. I.S.S. also seemed to base its recommendation on Trian\u2019s assertions that DuPont had excessive costs and governance issues, but the low margin growth seemed to be I.S.S.\u2019s chief concern. This is where DuPont shareholders are left: Depending on the measurement period, DuPont is either a growth machine or a laggard.", "answer": "DuPont is either a growth machine or a laggard", "sentence": "Depending on the measurement period, DuPont is either a growth machine or a laggard .", "paragraph_sentence": "The proxy advisory firm chose its stance primarily on the basis of the measurement periods it picked. Instead of using DuPont\u2019s measurements, which went back to 2008, I.S.S. went back to 2007, subtracted the health and nutrition business (saying it is a new business) and excluded the effect of the commodity boom in ethylene. Under this measurement, I.S.S. found that DuPont\u2019s growth margin based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization was only 0.5 percent for each year over seven years. I.S.S. also seemed to base its recommendation on Trian\u2019s assertions that DuPont had excessive costs and governance issues, but the low margin growth seemed to be I.S.S.\u2019s chief concern. This is where DuPont shareholders are left: Depending on the measurement period, DuPont is either a growth machine or a laggard . ", "paragraph_answer": "The proxy advisory firm chose its stance primarily on the basis of the measurement periods it picked. Instead of using DuPont\u2019s measurements, which went back to 2008, I.S.S. went back to 2007, subtracted the health and nutrition business (saying it is a new business) and excluded the effect of the commodity boom in ethylene. Under this measurement, I.S.S. found that DuPont\u2019s growth margin based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization was only 0.5 percent for each year over seven years. I.S.S. also seemed to base its recommendation on Trian\u2019s assertions that DuPont had excessive costs and governance issues, but the low margin growth seemed to be I.S.S.\u2019s chief concern. This is where DuPont shareholders are left: Depending on the measurement period, DuPont is either a growth machine or a laggard .", "sentence_answer": "Depending on the measurement period, DuPont is either a growth machine or a laggard ."} +{"question": "What might help DuPont, as with most other sizable corporations?", "paragraph": "Don\u2019t get me wrong. Like any large corporation, or any person frankly, DuPont could use some cleaning up. As a result, the company is selling its hospitality businesses like Hotel du Pont, the DuPont Country Club and the DuPont Theatre (which was recently renamed). The chemical business is also being spun off into a new company called Chemours. Both sides would have probably settled the proxy fight, if it were not for the fact that DuPont does not want to appoint a director from Trian. DuPont\u2019s justification is that this would bring a new \u201cback office\u201d into the DuPont boardroom. The Trian directors would be working with Trian staff to second-guess management. This goes on almost any time a hedge fund takes a board seat. For DuPont, it is likely to be a problem because they suspect Mr. Peltz is a Trojan horse who will push to break up the company into three once he is inside the boardroom. Who knows who is right? They both have good points. But the battle highlights two things.", "answer": "some cleaning up", "sentence": "Like any large corporation, or any person frankly, DuPont could use some cleaning up .", "paragraph_sentence": "Don\u2019t get me wrong. Like any large corporation, or any person frankly, DuPont could use some cleaning up . As a result, the company is selling its hospitality businesses like Hotel du Pont, the DuPont Country Club and the DuPont Theatre (which was recently renamed). The chemical business is also being spun off into a new company called Chemours. Both sides would have probably settled the proxy fight, if it were not for the fact that DuPont does not want to appoint a director from Trian. DuPont\u2019s justification is that this would bring a new \u201cback office\u201d into the DuPont boardroom. The Trian directors would be working with Trian staff to second-guess management. This goes on almost any time a hedge fund takes a board seat. For DuPont, it is likely to be a problem because they suspect Mr. Peltz is a Trojan horse who will push to break up the company into three once he is inside the boardroom. Who knows who is right? They both have good points. But the battle highlights two things.", "paragraph_answer": "Don\u2019t get me wrong. Like any large corporation, or any person frankly, DuPont could use some cleaning up . As a result, the company is selling its hospitality businesses like Hotel du Pont, the DuPont Country Club and the DuPont Theatre (which was recently renamed). The chemical business is also being spun off into a new company called Chemours. Both sides would have probably settled the proxy fight, if it were not for the fact that DuPont does not want to appoint a director from Trian. DuPont\u2019s justification is that this would bring a new \u201cback office\u201d into the DuPont boardroom. The Trian directors would be working with Trian staff to second-guess management. This goes on almost any time a hedge fund takes a board seat. For DuPont, it is likely to be a problem because they suspect Mr. Peltz is a Trojan horse who will push to break up the company into three once he is inside the boardroom. Who knows who is right? They both have good points. But the battle highlights two things.", "sentence_answer": "Like any large corporation, or any person frankly, DuPont could use some cleaning up ."} +{"question": "Which businesses are being sold by DuPont?", "paragraph": "Don\u2019t get me wrong. Like any large corporation, or any person frankly, DuPont could use some cleaning up. As a result, the company is selling its hospitality businesses like Hotel du Pont, the DuPont Country Club and the DuPont Theatre (which was recently renamed). The chemical business is also being spun off into a new company called Chemours. Both sides would have probably settled the proxy fight, if it were not for the fact that DuPont does not want to appoint a director from Trian. DuPont\u2019s justification is that this would bring a new \u201cback office\u201d into the DuPont boardroom. The Trian directors would be working with Trian staff to second-guess management. This goes on almost any time a hedge fund takes a board seat. For DuPont, it is likely to be a problem because they suspect Mr. Peltz is a Trojan horse who will push to break up the company into three once he is inside the boardroom. Who knows who is right? They both have good points. But the battle highlights two things.", "answer": "Hotel du Pont, the DuPont Country Club and the DuPont Theatre", "sentence": "As a result, the company is selling its hospitality businesses like Hotel du Pont, the DuPont Country Club and the DuPont Theatre (which was recently renamed).", "paragraph_sentence": "Don\u2019t get me wrong. Like any large corporation, or any person frankly, DuPont could use some cleaning up. As a result, the company is selling its hospitality businesses like Hotel du Pont, the DuPont Country Club and the DuPont Theatre (which was recently renamed). The chemical business is also being spun off into a new company called Chemours. Both sides would have probably settled the proxy fight, if it were not for the fact that DuPont does not want to appoint a director from Trian. DuPont\u2019s justification is that this would bring a new \u201cback office\u201d into the DuPont boardroom. The Trian directors would be working with Trian staff to second-guess management. This goes on almost any time a hedge fund takes a board seat. For DuPont, it is likely to be a problem because they suspect Mr. Peltz is a Trojan horse who will push to break up the company into three once he is inside the boardroom. Who knows who is right? They both have good points. But the battle highlights two things.", "paragraph_answer": "Don\u2019t get me wrong. Like any large corporation, or any person frankly, DuPont could use some cleaning up. As a result, the company is selling its hospitality businesses like Hotel du Pont, the DuPont Country Club and the DuPont Theatre (which was recently renamed). The chemical business is also being spun off into a new company called Chemours. Both sides would have probably settled the proxy fight, if it were not for the fact that DuPont does not want to appoint a director from Trian. DuPont\u2019s justification is that this would bring a new \u201cback office\u201d into the DuPont boardroom. The Trian directors would be working with Trian staff to second-guess management. This goes on almost any time a hedge fund takes a board seat. For DuPont, it is likely to be a problem because they suspect Mr. Peltz is a Trojan horse who will push to break up the company into three once he is inside the boardroom. Who knows who is right? They both have good points. But the battle highlights two things.", "sentence_answer": "As a result, the company is selling its hospitality businesses like Hotel du Pont, the DuPont Country Club and the DuPont Theatre (which was recently renamed)."} +{"question": "Which entity of DuPont's was recently given a new name?", "paragraph": "Don\u2019t get me wrong. Like any large corporation, or any person frankly, DuPont could use some cleaning up. As a result, the company is selling its hospitality businesses like Hotel du Pont, the DuPont Country Club and the DuPont Theatre (which was recently renamed). The chemical business is also being spun off into a new company called Chemours. Both sides would have probably settled the proxy fight, if it were not for the fact that DuPont does not want to appoint a director from Trian. DuPont\u2019s justification is that this would bring a new \u201cback office\u201d into the DuPont boardroom. The Trian directors would be working with Trian staff to second-guess management. This goes on almost any time a hedge fund takes a board seat. For DuPont, it is likely to be a problem because they suspect Mr. Peltz is a Trojan horse who will push to break up the company into three once he is inside the boardroom. Who knows who is right? They both have good points. But the battle highlights two things.", "answer": "DuPont Theatre", "sentence": "As a result, the company is selling its hospitality businesses like Hotel du Pont, the DuPont Country Club and the DuPont Theatre (which was recently renamed).", "paragraph_sentence": "Don\u2019t get me wrong. Like any large corporation, or any person frankly, DuPont could use some cleaning up. As a result, the company is selling its hospitality businesses like Hotel du Pont, the DuPont Country Club and the DuPont Theatre (which was recently renamed). The chemical business is also being spun off into a new company called Chemours. Both sides would have probably settled the proxy fight, if it were not for the fact that DuPont does not want to appoint a director from Trian. DuPont\u2019s justification is that this would bring a new \u201cback office\u201d into the DuPont boardroom. The Trian directors would be working with Trian staff to second-guess management. This goes on almost any time a hedge fund takes a board seat. For DuPont, it is likely to be a problem because they suspect Mr. Peltz is a Trojan horse who will push to break up the company into three once he is inside the boardroom. Who knows who is right? They both have good points. But the battle highlights two things.", "paragraph_answer": "Don\u2019t get me wrong. Like any large corporation, or any person frankly, DuPont could use some cleaning up. As a result, the company is selling its hospitality businesses like Hotel du Pont, the DuPont Country Club and the DuPont Theatre (which was recently renamed). The chemical business is also being spun off into a new company called Chemours. Both sides would have probably settled the proxy fight, if it were not for the fact that DuPont does not want to appoint a director from Trian. DuPont\u2019s justification is that this would bring a new \u201cback office\u201d into the DuPont boardroom. The Trian directors would be working with Trian staff to second-guess management. This goes on almost any time a hedge fund takes a board seat. For DuPont, it is likely to be a problem because they suspect Mr. Peltz is a Trojan horse who will push to break up the company into three once he is inside the boardroom. Who knows who is right? They both have good points. But the battle highlights two things.", "sentence_answer": "As a result, the company is selling its hospitality businesses like Hotel du Pont, the DuPont Country Club and the DuPont Theatre (which was recently renamed)."} +{"question": "What is the new name of DuPont's chemical business?", "paragraph": "Don\u2019t get me wrong. Like any large corporation, or any person frankly, DuPont could use some cleaning up. As a result, the company is selling its hospitality businesses like Hotel du Pont, the DuPont Country Club and the DuPont Theatre (which was recently renamed). The chemical business is also being spun off into a new company called Chemours. Both sides would have probably settled the proxy fight, if it were not for the fact that DuPont does not want to appoint a director from Trian. DuPont\u2019s justification is that this would bring a new \u201cback office\u201d into the DuPont boardroom. The Trian directors would be working with Trian staff to second-guess management. This goes on almost any time a hedge fund takes a board seat. For DuPont, it is likely to be a problem because they suspect Mr. Peltz is a Trojan horse who will push to break up the company into three once he is inside the boardroom. Who knows who is right? They both have good points. But the battle highlights two things.", "answer": "Chemours", "sentence": "The chemical business is also being spun off into a new company called Chemours .", "paragraph_sentence": "Don\u2019t get me wrong. Like any large corporation, or any person frankly, DuPont could use some cleaning up. As a result, the company is selling its hospitality businesses like Hotel du Pont, the DuPont Country Club and the DuPont Theatre (which was recently renamed). The chemical business is also being spun off into a new company called Chemours . Both sides would have probably settled the proxy fight, if it were not for the fact that DuPont does not want to appoint a director from Trian. DuPont\u2019s justification is that this would bring a new \u201cback office\u201d into the DuPont boardroom. The Trian directors would be working with Trian staff to second-guess management. This goes on almost any time a hedge fund takes a board seat. For DuPont, it is likely to be a problem because they suspect Mr. Peltz is a Trojan horse who will push to break up the company into three once he is inside the boardroom. Who knows who is right? They both have good points. But the battle highlights two things.", "paragraph_answer": "Don\u2019t get me wrong. Like any large corporation, or any person frankly, DuPont could use some cleaning up. As a result, the company is selling its hospitality businesses like Hotel du Pont, the DuPont Country Club and the DuPont Theatre (which was recently renamed). The chemical business is also being spun off into a new company called Chemours . Both sides would have probably settled the proxy fight, if it were not for the fact that DuPont does not want to appoint a director from Trian. DuPont\u2019s justification is that this would bring a new \u201cback office\u201d into the DuPont boardroom. The Trian directors would be working with Trian staff to second-guess management. This goes on almost any time a hedge fund takes a board seat. For DuPont, it is likely to be a problem because they suspect Mr. Peltz is a Trojan horse who will push to break up the company into three once he is inside the boardroom. Who knows who is right? They both have good points. But the battle highlights two things.", "sentence_answer": "The chemical business is also being spun off into a new company called Chemours ."} +{"question": "Who might DuPont suspect wants to disrupt and break up the company?", "paragraph": "Don\u2019t get me wrong. Like any large corporation, or any person frankly, DuPont could use some cleaning up. As a result, the company is selling its hospitality businesses like Hotel du Pont, the DuPont Country Club and the DuPont Theatre (which was recently renamed). The chemical business is also being spun off into a new company called Chemours. Both sides would have probably settled the proxy fight, if it were not for the fact that DuPont does not want to appoint a director from Trian. DuPont\u2019s justification is that this would bring a new \u201cback office\u201d into the DuPont boardroom. The Trian directors would be working with Trian staff to second-guess management. This goes on almost any time a hedge fund takes a board seat. For DuPont, it is likely to be a problem because they suspect Mr. Peltz is a Trojan horse who will push to break up the company into three once he is inside the boardroom. Who knows who is right? They both have good points. But the battle highlights two things.", "answer": "Mr. Peltz", "sentence": "For DuPont, it is likely to be a problem because they suspect Mr. Peltz is a Trojan horse who will push to break up the company into three once he is inside the boardroom.", "paragraph_sentence": "Don\u2019t get me wrong. Like any large corporation, or any person frankly, DuPont could use some cleaning up. As a result, the company is selling its hospitality businesses like Hotel du Pont, the DuPont Country Club and the DuPont Theatre (which was recently renamed). The chemical business is also being spun off into a new company called Chemours. Both sides would have probably settled the proxy fight, if it were not for the fact that DuPont does not want to appoint a director from Trian. DuPont\u2019s justification is that this would bring a new \u201cback office\u201d into the DuPont boardroom. The Trian directors would be working with Trian staff to second-guess management. This goes on almost any time a hedge fund takes a board seat. For DuPont, it is likely to be a problem because they suspect Mr. Peltz is a Trojan horse who will push to break up the company into three once he is inside the boardroom. Who knows who is right? They both have good points. But the battle highlights two things.", "paragraph_answer": "Don\u2019t get me wrong. Like any large corporation, or any person frankly, DuPont could use some cleaning up. As a result, the company is selling its hospitality businesses like Hotel du Pont, the DuPont Country Club and the DuPont Theatre (which was recently renamed). The chemical business is also being spun off into a new company called Chemours. Both sides would have probably settled the proxy fight, if it were not for the fact that DuPont does not want to appoint a director from Trian. DuPont\u2019s justification is that this would bring a new \u201cback office\u201d into the DuPont boardroom. The Trian directors would be working with Trian staff to second-guess management. This goes on almost any time a hedge fund takes a board seat. For DuPont, it is likely to be a problem because they suspect Mr. Peltz is a Trojan horse who will push to break up the company into three once he is inside the boardroom. Who knows who is right? They both have good points. But the battle highlights two things.", "sentence_answer": "For DuPont, it is likely to be a problem because they suspect Mr. Peltz is a Trojan horse who will push to break up the company into three once he is inside the boardroom."} +{"question": "On what date is the investor vote occurring?", "paragraph": "The May 13 investor vote is fast approaching. Some 30 percent of DuPont\u2019s shareholder base is made up of retail investors, many of whom may cast votes (but like much of the American electorate, probably won\u2019t). This leaves DuPont\u2019s fate to be decided by the mutual funds. Until the I.S.S. report, DuPont seemed to be on an upward track; now, it is hard to say whether the company will win. In truth, a settlement is still the logical course \u2013 it\u2019s a fact of life these days, as Mr. Lipton points out. Both sides know DuPont\u2019s performance quite well and can work through all of these issues better than anyone.", "answer": "May 13", "sentence": "The May 13 investor vote is fast approaching.", "paragraph_sentence": " The May 13 investor vote is fast approaching. Some 30 percent of DuPont\u2019s shareholder base is made up of retail investors, many of whom may cast votes (but like much of the American electorate, probably won\u2019t). This leaves DuPont\u2019s fate to be decided by the mutual funds. Until the I.S.S. report, DuPont seemed to be on an upward track; now, it is hard to say whether the company will win. In truth, a settlement is still the logical course \u2013 it\u2019s a fact of life these days, as Mr. Lipton points out. Both sides know DuPont\u2019s performance quite well and can work through all of these issues better than anyone.", "paragraph_answer": "The May 13 investor vote is fast approaching. Some 30 percent of DuPont\u2019s shareholder base is made up of retail investors, many of whom may cast votes (but like much of the American electorate, probably won\u2019t). This leaves DuPont\u2019s fate to be decided by the mutual funds. Until the I.S.S. report, DuPont seemed to be on an upward track; now, it is hard to say whether the company will win. In truth, a settlement is still the logical course \u2013 it\u2019s a fact of life these days, as Mr. Lipton points out. Both sides know DuPont\u2019s performance quite well and can work through all of these issues better than anyone.", "sentence_answer": "The May 13 investor vote is fast approaching."} +{"question": "What share of DuPont's shareholder base is comprised of retail investors?", "paragraph": "The May 13 investor vote is fast approaching. Some 30 percent of DuPont\u2019s shareholder base is made up of retail investors, many of whom may cast votes (but like much of the American electorate, probably won\u2019t). This leaves DuPont\u2019s fate to be decided by the mutual funds. Until the I.S.S. report, DuPont seemed to be on an upward track; now, it is hard to say whether the company will win. In truth, a settlement is still the logical course \u2013 it\u2019s a fact of life these days, as Mr. Lipton points out. Both sides know DuPont\u2019s performance quite well and can work through all of these issues better than anyone.", "answer": "30 percent", "sentence": "Some 30 percent of DuPont\u2019s shareholder base is made up of retail investors, many of whom may cast votes (but like much of the American electorate, probably won\u2019t).", "paragraph_sentence": "The May 13 investor vote is fast approaching. Some 30 percent of DuPont\u2019s shareholder base is made up of retail investors, many of whom may cast votes (but like much of the American electorate, probably won\u2019t). This leaves DuPont\u2019s fate to be decided by the mutual funds. Until the I.S.S. report, DuPont seemed to be on an upward track; now, it is hard to say whether the company will win. In truth, a settlement is still the logical course \u2013 it\u2019s a fact of life these days, as Mr. Lipton points out. Both sides know DuPont\u2019s performance quite well and can work through all of these issues better than anyone.", "paragraph_answer": "The May 13 investor vote is fast approaching. Some 30 percent of DuPont\u2019s shareholder base is made up of retail investors, many of whom may cast votes (but like much of the American electorate, probably won\u2019t). This leaves DuPont\u2019s fate to be decided by the mutual funds. Until the I.S.S. report, DuPont seemed to be on an upward track; now, it is hard to say whether the company will win. In truth, a settlement is still the logical course \u2013 it\u2019s a fact of life these days, as Mr. Lipton points out. Both sides know DuPont\u2019s performance quite well and can work through all of these issues better than anyone.", "sentence_answer": "Some 30 percent of DuPont\u2019s shareholder base is made up of retail investors, many of whom may cast votes (but like much of the American electorate, probably won\u2019t)."} +{"question": "By what means will DuPont's destiny be determined?", "paragraph": "The May 13 investor vote is fast approaching. Some 30 percent of DuPont\u2019s shareholder base is made up of retail investors, many of whom may cast votes (but like much of the American electorate, probably won\u2019t). This leaves DuPont\u2019s fate to be decided by the mutual funds. Until the I.S.S. report, DuPont seemed to be on an upward track; now, it is hard to say whether the company will win. In truth, a settlement is still the logical course \u2013 it\u2019s a fact of life these days, as Mr. Lipton points out. Both sides know DuPont\u2019s performance quite well and can work through all of these issues better than anyone.", "answer": "mutual funds", "sentence": "This leaves DuPont\u2019s fate to be decided by the mutual funds .", "paragraph_sentence": "The May 13 investor vote is fast approaching. Some 30 percent of DuPont\u2019s shareholder base is made up of retail investors, many of whom may cast votes (but like much of the American electorate, probably won\u2019t). This leaves DuPont\u2019s fate to be decided by the mutual funds . Until the I.S.S. report, DuPont seemed to be on an upward track; now, it is hard to say whether the company will win. In truth, a settlement is still the logical course \u2013 it\u2019s a fact of life these days, as Mr. Lipton points out. Both sides know DuPont\u2019s performance quite well and can work through all of these issues better than anyone.", "paragraph_answer": "The May 13 investor vote is fast approaching. Some 30 percent of DuPont\u2019s shareholder base is made up of retail investors, many of whom may cast votes (but like much of the American electorate, probably won\u2019t). This leaves DuPont\u2019s fate to be decided by the mutual funds . Until the I.S.S. report, DuPont seemed to be on an upward track; now, it is hard to say whether the company will win. In truth, a settlement is still the logical course \u2013 it\u2019s a fact of life these days, as Mr. Lipton points out. Both sides know DuPont\u2019s performance quite well and can work through all of these issues better than anyone.", "sentence_answer": "This leaves DuPont\u2019s fate to be decided by the mutual funds ."} +{"question": "An I.S.S. report stated the DuPont may be on what type of trajectory?", "paragraph": "The May 13 investor vote is fast approaching. Some 30 percent of DuPont\u2019s shareholder base is made up of retail investors, many of whom may cast votes (but like much of the American electorate, probably won\u2019t). This leaves DuPont\u2019s fate to be decided by the mutual funds. Until the I.S.S. report, DuPont seemed to be on an upward track; now, it is hard to say whether the company will win. In truth, a settlement is still the logical course \u2013 it\u2019s a fact of life these days, as Mr. Lipton points out. Both sides know DuPont\u2019s performance quite well and can work through all of these issues better than anyone.", "answer": "upward", "sentence": "Until the I.S.S. report, DuPont seemed to be on an upward track; now, it is hard to say whether the company will win.", "paragraph_sentence": "The May 13 investor vote is fast approaching. Some 30 percent of DuPont\u2019s shareholder base is made up of retail investors, many of whom may cast votes (but like much of the American electorate, probably won\u2019t). This leaves DuPont\u2019s fate to be decided by the mutual funds. Until the I.S.S. report, DuPont seemed to be on an upward track; now, it is hard to say whether the company will win. In truth, a settlement is still the logical course \u2013 it\u2019s a fact of life these days, as Mr. Lipton points out. Both sides know DuPont\u2019s performance quite well and can work through all of these issues better than anyone.", "paragraph_answer": "The May 13 investor vote is fast approaching. Some 30 percent of DuPont\u2019s shareholder base is made up of retail investors, many of whom may cast votes (but like much of the American electorate, probably won\u2019t). This leaves DuPont\u2019s fate to be decided by the mutual funds. Until the I.S.S. report, DuPont seemed to be on an upward track; now, it is hard to say whether the company will win. In truth, a settlement is still the logical course \u2013 it\u2019s a fact of life these days, as Mr. Lipton points out. Both sides know DuPont\u2019s performance quite well and can work through all of these issues better than anyone.", "sentence_answer": "Until the I.S.S. report, DuPont seemed to be on an upward track; now, it is hard to say whether the company will win."} +{"question": "What is the most reasonable course of action for DuPont?", "paragraph": "The May 13 investor vote is fast approaching. Some 30 percent of DuPont\u2019s shareholder base is made up of retail investors, many of whom may cast votes (but like much of the American electorate, probably won\u2019t). This leaves DuPont\u2019s fate to be decided by the mutual funds. Until the I.S.S. report, DuPont seemed to be on an upward track; now, it is hard to say whether the company will win. In truth, a settlement is still the logical course \u2013 it\u2019s a fact of life these days, as Mr. Lipton points out. Both sides know DuPont\u2019s performance quite well and can work through all of these issues better than anyone.", "answer": "a settlement", "sentence": "In truth, a settlement is still the logical course \u2013 it\u2019s a fact of life these days, as Mr. Lipton points out.", "paragraph_sentence": "The May 13 investor vote is fast approaching. Some 30 percent of DuPont\u2019s shareholder base is made up of retail investors, many of whom may cast votes (but like much of the American electorate, probably won\u2019t). This leaves DuPont\u2019s fate to be decided by the mutual funds. Until the I.S.S. report, DuPont seemed to be on an upward track; now, it is hard to say whether the company will win. In truth, a settlement is still the logical course \u2013 it\u2019s a fact of life these days, as Mr. Lipton points out. Both sides know DuPont\u2019s performance quite well and can work through all of these issues better than anyone.", "paragraph_answer": "The May 13 investor vote is fast approaching. Some 30 percent of DuPont\u2019s shareholder base is made up of retail investors, many of whom may cast votes (but like much of the American electorate, probably won\u2019t). This leaves DuPont\u2019s fate to be decided by the mutual funds. Until the I.S.S. report, DuPont seemed to be on an upward track; now, it is hard to say whether the company will win. In truth, a settlement is still the logical course \u2013 it\u2019s a fact of life these days, as Mr. Lipton points out. Both sides know DuPont\u2019s performance quite well and can work through all of these issues better than anyone.", "sentence_answer": "In truth, a settlement is still the logical course \u2013 it\u2019s a fact of life these days, as Mr. Lipton points out."} +{"question": "What college did the bride graduate from?", "paragraph": "The bride, 30, is a litigation associate at the New York law firm Cahill Gordon Reindel. She graduated cum laude from Colby College. She is the daughter of Nina Lawson and Thomas E. Lawson of Quogue. The bride\u2019s father retired as a managing partner in Arnold Worldwide, a Boston advertising agency. Her mother is a counselor at Camp Good Grief, a summer camp in Westhampton Beach, N.Y., for grieving children.", "answer": "Colby College", "sentence": "She graduated cum laude from Colby College .", "paragraph_sentence": "The bride, 30, is a litigation associate at the New York law firm Cahill Gordon Reindel. She graduated cum laude from Colby College . She is the daughter of Nina Lawson and Thomas E. Lawson of Quogue. The bride\u2019s father retired as a managing partner in Arnold Worldwide, a Boston advertising agency. Her mother is a counselor at Camp Good Grief, a summer camp in Westhampton Beach, N.Y., for grieving children.", "paragraph_answer": "The bride, 30, is a litigation associate at the New York law firm Cahill Gordon Reindel. She graduated cum laude from Colby College . She is the daughter of Nina Lawson and Thomas E. Lawson of Quogue. The bride\u2019s father retired as a managing partner in Arnold Worldwide, a Boston advertising agency. Her mother is a counselor at Camp Good Grief, a summer camp in Westhampton Beach, N.Y., for grieving children.", "sentence_answer": "She graduated cum laude from Colby College ."} +{"question": "Who is the bride's father?", "paragraph": "The bride, 30, is a litigation associate at the New York law firm Cahill Gordon Reindel. She graduated cum laude from Colby College. She is the daughter of Nina Lawson and Thomas E. Lawson of Quogue. The bride\u2019s father retired as a managing partner in Arnold Worldwide, a Boston advertising agency. Her mother is a counselor at Camp Good Grief, a summer camp in Westhampton Beach, N.Y., for grieving children.", "answer": "Thomas E. Lawson", "sentence": "She is the daughter of Nina Lawson and Thomas E. Lawson of Quogue.", "paragraph_sentence": "The bride, 30, is a litigation associate at the New York law firm Cahill Gordon Reindel. She graduated cum laude from Colby College. She is the daughter of Nina Lawson and Thomas E. Lawson of Quogue. The bride\u2019s father retired as a managing partner in Arnold Worldwide, a Boston advertising agency. Her mother is a counselor at Camp Good Grief, a summer camp in Westhampton Beach, N.Y., for grieving children.", "paragraph_answer": "The bride, 30, is a litigation associate at the New York law firm Cahill Gordon Reindel. She graduated cum laude from Colby College. She is the daughter of Nina Lawson and Thomas E. Lawson of Quogue. The bride\u2019s father retired as a managing partner in Arnold Worldwide, a Boston advertising agency. Her mother is a counselor at Camp Good Grief, a summer camp in Westhampton Beach, N.Y., for grieving children.", "sentence_answer": "She is the daughter of Nina Lawson and Thomas E. Lawson of Quogue."} +{"question": "What position did the brides father hold at work?", "paragraph": "The bride, 30, is a litigation associate at the New York law firm Cahill Gordon Reindel. She graduated cum laude from Colby College. She is the daughter of Nina Lawson and Thomas E. Lawson of Quogue. The bride\u2019s father retired as a managing partner in Arnold Worldwide, a Boston advertising agency. Her mother is a counselor at Camp Good Grief, a summer camp in Westhampton Beach, N.Y., for grieving children.", "answer": "managing partner", "sentence": "The bride\u2019s father retired as a managing partner in Arnold Worldwide, a Boston advertising agency.", "paragraph_sentence": "The bride, 30, is a litigation associate at the New York law firm Cahill Gordon Reindel. She graduated cum laude from Colby College. She is the daughter of Nina Lawson and Thomas E. Lawson of Quogue. The bride\u2019s father retired as a managing partner in Arnold Worldwide, a Boston advertising agency. Her mother is a counselor at Camp Good Grief, a summer camp in Westhampton Beach, N.Y., for grieving children.", "paragraph_answer": "The bride, 30, is a litigation associate at the New York law firm Cahill Gordon Reindel. She graduated cum laude from Colby College. She is the daughter of Nina Lawson and Thomas E. Lawson of Quogue. The bride\u2019s father retired as a managing partner in Arnold Worldwide, a Boston advertising agency. Her mother is a counselor at Camp Good Grief, a summer camp in Westhampton Beach, N.Y., for grieving children.", "sentence_answer": "The bride\u2019s father retired as a managing partner in Arnold Worldwide, a Boston advertising agency."} +{"question": "Where did the brides mother work?", "paragraph": "The bride, 30, is a litigation associate at the New York law firm Cahill Gordon Reindel. She graduated cum laude from Colby College. She is the daughter of Nina Lawson and Thomas E. Lawson of Quogue. The bride\u2019s father retired as a managing partner in Arnold Worldwide, a Boston advertising agency. Her mother is a counselor at Camp Good Grief, a summer camp in Westhampton Beach, N.Y., for grieving children.", "answer": "Camp Good Grief", "sentence": "Her mother is a counselor at Camp Good Grief , a summer camp in Westhampton Beach, N.Y., for grieving children.", "paragraph_sentence": "The bride, 30, is a litigation associate at the New York law firm Cahill Gordon Reindel. She graduated cum laude from Colby College. She is the daughter of Nina Lawson and Thomas E. Lawson of Quogue. The bride\u2019s father retired as a managing partner in Arnold Worldwide, a Boston advertising agency. Her mother is a counselor at Camp Good Grief , a summer camp in Westhampton Beach, N.Y., for grieving children. ", "paragraph_answer": "The bride, 30, is a litigation associate at the New York law firm Cahill Gordon Reindel. She graduated cum laude from Colby College. She is the daughter of Nina Lawson and Thomas E. Lawson of Quogue. The bride\u2019s father retired as a managing partner in Arnold Worldwide, a Boston advertising agency. Her mother is a counselor at Camp Good Grief , a summer camp in Westhampton Beach, N.Y., for grieving children.", "sentence_answer": "Her mother is a counselor at Camp Good Grief , a summer camp in Westhampton Beach, N.Y., for grieving children."} +{"question": "What city did the brides father work in?", "paragraph": "The bride, 30, is a litigation associate at the New York law firm Cahill Gordon Reindel. She graduated cum laude from Colby College. She is the daughter of Nina Lawson and Thomas E. Lawson of Quogue. The bride\u2019s father retired as a managing partner in Arnold Worldwide, a Boston advertising agency. Her mother is a counselor at Camp Good Grief, a summer camp in Westhampton Beach, N.Y., for grieving children.", "answer": "Boston", "sentence": "The bride\u2019s father retired as a managing partner in Arnold Worldwide, a Boston advertising agency.", "paragraph_sentence": "The bride, 30, is a litigation associate at the New York law firm Cahill Gordon Reindel. She graduated cum laude from Colby College. She is the daughter of Nina Lawson and Thomas E. Lawson of Quogue. The bride\u2019s father retired as a managing partner in Arnold Worldwide, a Boston advertising agency. Her mother is a counselor at Camp Good Grief, a summer camp in Westhampton Beach, N.Y., for grieving children.", "paragraph_answer": "The bride, 30, is a litigation associate at the New York law firm Cahill Gordon Reindel. She graduated cum laude from Colby College. She is the daughter of Nina Lawson and Thomas E. Lawson of Quogue. The bride\u2019s father retired as a managing partner in Arnold Worldwide, a Boston advertising agency. Her mother is a counselor at Camp Good Grief, a summer camp in Westhampton Beach, N.Y., for grieving children.", "sentence_answer": "The bride\u2019s father retired as a managing partner in Arnold Worldwide, a Boston advertising agency."} +{"question": "In what church were Michael and Brigid married?", "paragraph": "Brigid Graham Abraham and Michael Alexander Hensley were married Friday at the St. Brigid Church in Peapack, N.J. Msgr. Edward C. Puleo performed the ceremony. The bride, 30, and groom, 31, met at Pickard Chilton, an architecture firm in New Haven, where she is an archivist and he is an architect. The bride graduated from Barnard College and received a master's degree in library and information sciences from Rutgers. She is a daughter of Moira Q. Abraham and Dr. Daniel J. Abraham of Westfield, N.J. The bride\u2019s father is a pediatrician at Somerset Pediatric Group in Warren, N.J. Her mother is a library media specialist at Roosevelt Intermediate School in Westfield.", "answer": "St. Brigid Church", "sentence": "Brigid Graham Abraham and Michael Alexander Hensley were married Friday at the St. Brigid Church in Peapack, N.J. Msgr.", "paragraph_sentence": " Brigid Graham Abraham and Michael Alexander Hensley were married Friday at the St. Brigid Church in Peapack, N.J. Msgr. Edward C. Puleo performed the ceremony. The bride, 30, and groom, 31, met at Pickard Chilton, an architecture firm in New Haven, where she is an archivist and he is an architect. The bride graduated from Barnard College and received a master's degree in library and information sciences from Rutgers. She is a daughter of Moira Q. Abraham and Dr. Daniel J. Abraham of Westfield, N.J. The bride\u2019s father is a pediatrician at Somerset Pediatric Group in Warren, N.J. Her mother is a library media specialist at Roosevelt Intermediate School in Westfield.", "paragraph_answer": "Brigid Graham Abraham and Michael Alexander Hensley were married Friday at the St. Brigid Church in Peapack, N.J. Msgr. Edward C. Puleo performed the ceremony. The bride, 30, and groom, 31, met at Pickard Chilton, an architecture firm in New Haven, where she is an archivist and he is an architect. The bride graduated from Barnard College and received a master's degree in library and information sciences from Rutgers. She is a daughter of Moira Q. Abraham and Dr. Daniel J. Abraham of Westfield, N.J. The bride\u2019s father is a pediatrician at Somerset Pediatric Group in Warren, N.J. Her mother is a library media specialist at Roosevelt Intermediate School in Westfield.", "sentence_answer": "Brigid Graham Abraham and Michael Alexander Hensley were married Friday at the St. Brigid Church in Peapack, N.J. Msgr."} +{"question": "Where did Michael and Brigid meet?", "paragraph": "Brigid Graham Abraham and Michael Alexander Hensley were married Friday at the St. Brigid Church in Peapack, N.J. Msgr. Edward C. Puleo performed the ceremony. The bride, 30, and groom, 31, met at Pickard Chilton, an architecture firm in New Haven, where she is an archivist and he is an architect. The bride graduated from Barnard College and received a master's degree in library and information sciences from Rutgers. She is a daughter of Moira Q. Abraham and Dr. Daniel J. Abraham of Westfield, N.J. The bride\u2019s father is a pediatrician at Somerset Pediatric Group in Warren, N.J. Her mother is a library media specialist at Roosevelt Intermediate School in Westfield.", "answer": "Pickard Chilton", "sentence": "The bride, 30, and groom, 31, met at Pickard Chilton , an architecture firm in New Haven, where she is an archivist and he is an architect.", "paragraph_sentence": "Brigid Graham Abraham and Michael Alexander Hensley were married Friday at the St. Brigid Church in Peapack, N.J. Msgr. Edward C. Puleo performed the ceremony. The bride, 30, and groom, 31, met at Pickard Chilton , an architecture firm in New Haven, where she is an archivist and he is an architect. The bride graduated from Barnard College and received a master's degree in library and information sciences from Rutgers. She is a daughter of Moira Q. Abraham and Dr. Daniel J. Abraham of Westfield, N.J. The bride\u2019s father is a pediatrician at Somerset Pediatric Group in Warren, N.J. Her mother is a library media specialist at Roosevelt Intermediate School in Westfield.", "paragraph_answer": "Brigid Graham Abraham and Michael Alexander Hensley were married Friday at the St. Brigid Church in Peapack, N.J. Msgr. Edward C. Puleo performed the ceremony. The bride, 30, and groom, 31, met at Pickard Chilton , an architecture firm in New Haven, where she is an archivist and he is an architect. The bride graduated from Barnard College and received a master's degree in library and information sciences from Rutgers. She is a daughter of Moira Q. Abraham and Dr. Daniel J. Abraham of Westfield, N.J. The bride\u2019s father is a pediatrician at Somerset Pediatric Group in Warren, N.J. Her mother is a library media specialist at Roosevelt Intermediate School in Westfield.", "sentence_answer": "The bride, 30, and groom, 31, met at Pickard Chilton , an architecture firm in New Haven, where she is an archivist and he is an architect."} +{"question": "In what state was the church that Michael and Brigid got married at?", "paragraph": "Brigid Graham Abraham and Michael Alexander Hensley were married Friday at the St. Brigid Church in Peapack, N.J. Msgr. Edward C. Puleo performed the ceremony. The bride, 30, and groom, 31, met at Pickard Chilton, an architecture firm in New Haven, where she is an archivist and he is an architect. The bride graduated from Barnard College and received a master's degree in library and information sciences from Rutgers. She is a daughter of Moira Q. Abraham and Dr. Daniel J. Abraham of Westfield, N.J. The bride\u2019s father is a pediatrician at Somerset Pediatric Group in Warren, N.J. Her mother is a library media specialist at Roosevelt Intermediate School in Westfield.", "answer": "N.J", "sentence": "Brigid Graham Abraham and Michael Alexander Hensley were married Friday at the St. Brigid Church in Peapack, N.J .", "paragraph_sentence": " Brigid Graham Abraham and Michael Alexander Hensley were married Friday at the St. Brigid Church in Peapack, N.J . Msgr. Edward C. Puleo performed the ceremony. The bride, 30, and groom, 31, met at Pickard Chilton, an architecture firm in New Haven, where she is an archivist and he is an architect. The bride graduated from Barnard College and received a master's degree in library and information sciences from Rutgers. She is a daughter of Moira Q. Abraham and Dr. Daniel J. Abraham of Westfield, N.J. The bride\u2019s father is a pediatrician at Somerset Pediatric Group in Warren, N.J. Her mother is a library media specialist at Roosevelt Intermediate School in Westfield.", "paragraph_answer": "Brigid Graham Abraham and Michael Alexander Hensley were married Friday at the St. Brigid Church in Peapack, N.J . Msgr. Edward C. Puleo performed the ceremony. The bride, 30, and groom, 31, met at Pickard Chilton, an architecture firm in New Haven, where she is an archivist and he is an architect. The bride graduated from Barnard College and received a master's degree in library and information sciences from Rutgers. She is a daughter of Moira Q. Abraham and Dr. Daniel J. Abraham of Westfield, N.J. The bride\u2019s father is a pediatrician at Somerset Pediatric Group in Warren, N.J. Her mother is a library media specialist at Roosevelt Intermediate School in Westfield.", "sentence_answer": "Brigid Graham Abraham and Michael Alexander Hensley were married Friday at the St. Brigid Church in Peapack, N.J ."} +{"question": "From what college did Brigid graduate from?", "paragraph": "Brigid Graham Abraham and Michael Alexander Hensley were married Friday at the St. Brigid Church in Peapack, N.J. Msgr. Edward C. Puleo performed the ceremony. The bride, 30, and groom, 31, met at Pickard Chilton, an architecture firm in New Haven, where she is an archivist and he is an architect. The bride graduated from Barnard College and received a master's degree in library and information sciences from Rutgers. She is a daughter of Moira Q. Abraham and Dr. Daniel J. Abraham of Westfield, N.J. The bride\u2019s father is a pediatrician at Somerset Pediatric Group in Warren, N.J. Her mother is a library media specialist at Roosevelt Intermediate School in Westfield.", "answer": "Barnard College", "sentence": "The bride graduated from Barnard College and received a master's degree in library and information sciences from Rutgers.", "paragraph_sentence": "Brigid Graham Abraham and Michael Alexander Hensley were married Friday at the St. Brigid Church in Peapack, N.J. Msgr. Edward C. Puleo performed the ceremony. The bride, 30, and groom, 31, met at Pickard Chilton, an architecture firm in New Haven, where she is an archivist and he is an architect. The bride graduated from Barnard College and received a master's degree in library and information sciences from Rutgers. She is a daughter of Moira Q. Abraham and Dr. Daniel J. Abraham of Westfield, N.J. The bride\u2019s father is a pediatrician at Somerset Pediatric Group in Warren, N.J. Her mother is a library media specialist at Roosevelt Intermediate School in Westfield.", "paragraph_answer": "Brigid Graham Abraham and Michael Alexander Hensley were married Friday at the St. Brigid Church in Peapack, N.J. Msgr. Edward C. Puleo performed the ceremony. The bride, 30, and groom, 31, met at Pickard Chilton, an architecture firm in New Haven, where she is an archivist and he is an architect. The bride graduated from Barnard College and received a master's degree in library and information sciences from Rutgers. She is a daughter of Moira Q. Abraham and Dr. Daniel J. Abraham of Westfield, N.J. The bride\u2019s father is a pediatrician at Somerset Pediatric Group in Warren, N.J. Her mother is a library media specialist at Roosevelt Intermediate School in Westfield.", "sentence_answer": "The bride graduated from Barnard College and received a master's degree in library and information sciences from Rutgers."} +{"question": "What is the occupation of Brigid's father?", "paragraph": "Brigid Graham Abraham and Michael Alexander Hensley were married Friday at the St. Brigid Church in Peapack, N.J. Msgr. Edward C. Puleo performed the ceremony. The bride, 30, and groom, 31, met at Pickard Chilton, an architecture firm in New Haven, where she is an archivist and he is an architect. The bride graduated from Barnard College and received a master's degree in library and information sciences from Rutgers. She is a daughter of Moira Q. Abraham and Dr. Daniel J. Abraham of Westfield, N.J. The bride\u2019s father is a pediatrician at Somerset Pediatric Group in Warren, N.J. Her mother is a library media specialist at Roosevelt Intermediate School in Westfield.", "answer": "pediatrician", "sentence": "The bride\u2019s father is a pediatrician at Somerset Pediatric Group in Warren, N.J.", "paragraph_sentence": "Brigid Graham Abraham and Michael Alexander Hensley were married Friday at the St. Brigid Church in Peapack, N.J. Msgr. Edward C. Puleo performed the ceremony. The bride, 30, and groom, 31, met at Pickard Chilton, an architecture firm in New Haven, where she is an archivist and he is an architect. The bride graduated from Barnard College and received a master's degree in library and information sciences from Rutgers. She is a daughter of Moira Q. Abraham and Dr. Daniel J. Abraham of Westfield, N.J. The bride\u2019s father is a pediatrician at Somerset Pediatric Group in Warren, N.J. Her mother is a library media specialist at Roosevelt Intermediate School in Westfield.", "paragraph_answer": "Brigid Graham Abraham and Michael Alexander Hensley were married Friday at the St. Brigid Church in Peapack, N.J. Msgr. Edward C. Puleo performed the ceremony. The bride, 30, and groom, 31, met at Pickard Chilton, an architecture firm in New Haven, where she is an archivist and he is an architect. The bride graduated from Barnard College and received a master's degree in library and information sciences from Rutgers. She is a daughter of Moira Q. Abraham and Dr. Daniel J. Abraham of Westfield, N.J. The bride\u2019s father is a pediatrician at Somerset Pediatric Group in Warren, N.J. Her mother is a library media specialist at Roosevelt Intermediate School in Westfield.", "sentence_answer": "The bride\u2019s father is a pediatrician at Somerset Pediatric Group in Warren, N.J."} +{"question": "What was the name of the officer who shot VonDerrit D. Meyers Jr.?", "paragraph": "Prosecutors in St. Louis will not charge the police officer who fatally shot VonDerrit D. Myers Jr. in October, a shooting that renewed tensions with law enforcement weeks after Michael Brown was killed by an officer in nearby Ferguson. In a report released Monday, Jennifer M. Joyce, the circuit attorney for St. Louis, found that Mr. Myers \u201cproduced a gun\u201d during the encounter with the officer, Jason Flanery, who was working an off-duty security detail for a private company. Police had said Mr. Myers, 18, who was black, shot a stolen handgun before Officer Flanery, who is white, returned fire. Prosecutors said in their report that witnesses had seen gunfire coming from both directions and from two guns and that a semiautomatic pistol had been recovered next to Mr. Myers\u2019s body. Mr. Myers\u2019s family disputed the police account and insisted that he had been unarmed. Protesters marched for several nights after the shooting, and some drew parallels between Mr. Myers\u2019s death and that of Mr. Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old shot by a white Ferguson officer in August. In a statement, Ms. Joyce expressed condolences to the Myers family and called his death \u201ca tragic situation for our entire community.\u201d", "answer": "Jason Flanery", "sentence": "In a report released Monday, Jennifer M. Joyce, the circuit attorney for St. Louis, found that Mr. Myers \u201cproduced a gun\u201d during the encounter with the officer, Jason Flanery , who was working an off-duty security detail for a private company.", "paragraph_sentence": "Prosecutors in St. Louis will not charge the police officer who fatally shot VonDerrit D. Myers Jr. in October, a shooting that renewed tensions with law enforcement weeks after Michael Brown was killed by an officer in nearby Ferguson. In a report released Monday, Jennifer M. Joyce, the circuit attorney for St. Louis, found that Mr. Myers \u201cproduced a gun\u201d during the encounter with the officer, Jason Flanery , who was working an off-duty security detail for a private company. Police had said Mr. Myers, 18, who was black, shot a stolen handgun before Officer Flanery, who is white, returned fire. Prosecutors said in their report that witnesses had seen gunfire coming from both directions and from two guns and that a semiautomatic pistol had been recovered next to Mr. Myers\u2019s body. Mr. Myers\u2019s family disputed the police account and insisted that he had been unarmed. Protesters marched for several nights after the shooting, and some drew parallels between Mr. Myers\u2019s death and that of Mr. Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old shot by a white Ferguson officer in August. In a statement, Ms. Joyce expressed condolences to the Myers family and called his death \u201ca tragic situation for our entire community.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Prosecutors in St. Louis will not charge the police officer who fatally shot VonDerrit D. Myers Jr. in October, a shooting that renewed tensions with law enforcement weeks after Michael Brown was killed by an officer in nearby Ferguson. In a report released Monday, Jennifer M. Joyce, the circuit attorney for St. Louis, found that Mr. Myers \u201cproduced a gun\u201d during the encounter with the officer, Jason Flanery , who was working an off-duty security detail for a private company. Police had said Mr. Myers, 18, who was black, shot a stolen handgun before Officer Flanery, who is white, returned fire. Prosecutors said in their report that witnesses had seen gunfire coming from both directions and from two guns and that a semiautomatic pistol had been recovered next to Mr. Myers\u2019s body. Mr. Myers\u2019s family disputed the police account and insisted that he had been unarmed. Protesters marched for several nights after the shooting, and some drew parallels between Mr. Myers\u2019s death and that of Mr. Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old shot by a white Ferguson officer in August. In a statement, Ms. Joyce expressed condolences to the Myers family and called his death \u201ca tragic situation for our entire community.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In a report released Monday, Jennifer M. Joyce, the circuit attorney for St. Louis, found that Mr. Myers \u201cproduced a gun\u201d during the encounter with the officer, Jason Flanery , who was working an off-duty security detail for a private company."} +{"question": "What action by Mr. Meyers did the police say led to the officer firing his hand gun?", "paragraph": "Prosecutors in St. Louis will not charge the police officer who fatally shot VonDerrit D. Myers Jr. in October, a shooting that renewed tensions with law enforcement weeks after Michael Brown was killed by an officer in nearby Ferguson. In a report released Monday, Jennifer M. Joyce, the circuit attorney for St. Louis, found that Mr. Myers \u201cproduced a gun\u201d during the encounter with the officer, Jason Flanery, who was working an off-duty security detail for a private company. Police had said Mr. Myers, 18, who was black, shot a stolen handgun before Officer Flanery, who is white, returned fire. Prosecutors said in their report that witnesses had seen gunfire coming from both directions and from two guns and that a semiautomatic pistol had been recovered next to Mr. Myers\u2019s body. Mr. Myers\u2019s family disputed the police account and insisted that he had been unarmed. Protesters marched for several nights after the shooting, and some drew parallels between Mr. Myers\u2019s death and that of Mr. Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old shot by a white Ferguson officer in August. In a statement, Ms. Joyce expressed condolences to the Myers family and called his death \u201ca tragic situation for our entire community.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Myers, 18, who was black, shot a stolen handgun", "sentence": "Police had said Mr. Myers, 18, who was black, shot a stolen handgun before Officer Flanery, who is white, returned fire.", "paragraph_sentence": "Prosecutors in St. Louis will not charge the police officer who fatally shot VonDerrit D. Myers Jr. in October, a shooting that renewed tensions with law enforcement weeks after Michael Brown was killed by an officer in nearby Ferguson. In a report released Monday, Jennifer M. Joyce, the circuit attorney for St. Louis, found that Mr. Myers \u201cproduced a gun\u201d during the encounter with the officer, Jason Flanery, who was working an off-duty security detail for a private company. Police had said Mr. Myers, 18, who was black, shot a stolen handgun before Officer Flanery, who is white, returned fire. Prosecutors said in their report that witnesses had seen gunfire coming from both directions and from two guns and that a semiautomatic pistol had been recovered next to Mr. Myers\u2019s body. Mr. Myers\u2019s family disputed the police account and insisted that he had been unarmed. Protesters marched for several nights after the shooting, and some drew parallels between Mr. Myers\u2019s death and that of Mr. Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old shot by a white Ferguson officer in August. In a statement, Ms. Joyce expressed condolences to the Myers family and called his death \u201ca tragic situation for our entire community.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Prosecutors in St. Louis will not charge the police officer who fatally shot VonDerrit D. Myers Jr. in October, a shooting that renewed tensions with law enforcement weeks after Michael Brown was killed by an officer in nearby Ferguson. In a report released Monday, Jennifer M. Joyce, the circuit attorney for St. Louis, found that Mr. Myers \u201cproduced a gun\u201d during the encounter with the officer, Jason Flanery, who was working an off-duty security detail for a private company. Police had said Mr. Myers, 18, who was black, shot a stolen handgun before Officer Flanery, who is white, returned fire. Prosecutors said in their report that witnesses had seen gunfire coming from both directions and from two guns and that a semiautomatic pistol had been recovered next to Mr. Myers\u2019s body. Mr. Myers\u2019s family disputed the police account and insisted that he had been unarmed. Protesters marched for several nights after the shooting, and some drew parallels between Mr. Myers\u2019s death and that of Mr. Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old shot by a white Ferguson officer in August. In a statement, Ms. Joyce expressed condolences to the Myers family and called his death \u201ca tragic situation for our entire community.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Police had said Mr. Myers, 18, who was black, shot a stolen handgun before Officer Flanery, who is white, returned fire."} +{"question": "What case did protesters liken to the death of Mr. Meyers?", "paragraph": "Prosecutors in St. Louis will not charge the police officer who fatally shot VonDerrit D. Myers Jr. in October, a shooting that renewed tensions with law enforcement weeks after Michael Brown was killed by an officer in nearby Ferguson. In a report released Monday, Jennifer M. Joyce, the circuit attorney for St. Louis, found that Mr. Myers \u201cproduced a gun\u201d during the encounter with the officer, Jason Flanery, who was working an off-duty security detail for a private company. Police had said Mr. Myers, 18, who was black, shot a stolen handgun before Officer Flanery, who is white, returned fire. Prosecutors said in their report that witnesses had seen gunfire coming from both directions and from two guns and that a semiautomatic pistol had been recovered next to Mr. Myers\u2019s body. Mr. Myers\u2019s family disputed the police account and insisted that he had been unarmed. Protesters marched for several nights after the shooting, and some drew parallels between Mr. Myers\u2019s death and that of Mr. Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old shot by a white Ferguson officer in August. In a statement, Ms. Joyce expressed condolences to the Myers family and called his death \u201ca tragic situation for our entire community.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Brown", "sentence": "Protesters marched for several nights after the shooting, and some drew parallels between Mr. Myers\u2019s death and that of Mr. Brown , an unarmed black 18-year-old shot by a white Ferguson officer in August.", "paragraph_sentence": "Prosecutors in St. Louis will not charge the police officer who fatally shot VonDerrit D. Myers Jr. in October, a shooting that renewed tensions with law enforcement weeks after Michael Brown was killed by an officer in nearby Ferguson. In a report released Monday, Jennifer M. Joyce, the circuit attorney for St. Louis, found that Mr. Myers \u201cproduced a gun\u201d during the encounter with the officer, Jason Flanery, who was working an off-duty security detail for a private company. Police had said Mr. Myers, 18, who was black, shot a stolen handgun before Officer Flanery, who is white, returned fire. Prosecutors said in their report that witnesses had seen gunfire coming from both directions and from two guns and that a semiautomatic pistol had been recovered next to Mr. Myers\u2019s body. Mr. Myers\u2019s family disputed the police account and insisted that he had been unarmed. Protesters marched for several nights after the shooting, and some drew parallels between Mr. Myers\u2019s death and that of Mr. Brown , an unarmed black 18-year-old shot by a white Ferguson officer in August. In a statement, Ms. Joyce expressed condolences to the Myers family and called his death \u201ca tragic situation for our entire community.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Prosecutors in St. Louis will not charge the police officer who fatally shot VonDerrit D. Myers Jr. in October, a shooting that renewed tensions with law enforcement weeks after Michael Brown was killed by an officer in nearby Ferguson. In a report released Monday, Jennifer M. Joyce, the circuit attorney for St. Louis, found that Mr. Myers \u201cproduced a gun\u201d during the encounter with the officer, Jason Flanery, who was working an off-duty security detail for a private company. Police had said Mr. Myers, 18, who was black, shot a stolen handgun before Officer Flanery, who is white, returned fire. Prosecutors said in their report that witnesses had seen gunfire coming from both directions and from two guns and that a semiautomatic pistol had been recovered next to Mr. Myers\u2019s body. Mr. Myers\u2019s family disputed the police account and insisted that he had been unarmed. Protesters marched for several nights after the shooting, and some drew parallels between Mr. Myers\u2019s death and that of Mr. Brown , an unarmed black 18-year-old shot by a white Ferguson officer in August. In a statement, Ms. Joyce expressed condolences to the Myers family and called his death \u201ca tragic situation for our entire community.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Protesters marched for several nights after the shooting, and some drew parallels between Mr. Myers\u2019s death and that of Mr. Brown , an unarmed black 18-year-old shot by a white Ferguson officer in August."} +{"question": "The family of Mr. Meyers contested the police's version of events by making what claim about Mr. Meyers?", "paragraph": "Prosecutors in St. Louis will not charge the police officer who fatally shot VonDerrit D. Myers Jr. in October, a shooting that renewed tensions with law enforcement weeks after Michael Brown was killed by an officer in nearby Ferguson. In a report released Monday, Jennifer M. Joyce, the circuit attorney for St. Louis, found that Mr. Myers \u201cproduced a gun\u201d during the encounter with the officer, Jason Flanery, who was working an off-duty security detail for a private company. Police had said Mr. Myers, 18, who was black, shot a stolen handgun before Officer Flanery, who is white, returned fire. Prosecutors said in their report that witnesses had seen gunfire coming from both directions and from two guns and that a semiautomatic pistol had been recovered next to Mr. Myers\u2019s body. Mr. Myers\u2019s family disputed the police account and insisted that he had been unarmed. Protesters marched for several nights after the shooting, and some drew parallels between Mr. Myers\u2019s death and that of Mr. Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old shot by a white Ferguson officer in August. In a statement, Ms. Joyce expressed condolences to the Myers family and called his death \u201ca tragic situation for our entire community.\u201d", "answer": "he had been unarmed", "sentence": "Mr. Myers\u2019s family disputed the police account and insisted that he had been unarmed .", "paragraph_sentence": "Prosecutors in St. Louis will not charge the police officer who fatally shot VonDerrit D. Myers Jr. in October, a shooting that renewed tensions with law enforcement weeks after Michael Brown was killed by an officer in nearby Ferguson. In a report released Monday, Jennifer M. Joyce, the circuit attorney for St. Louis, found that Mr. Myers \u201cproduced a gun\u201d during the encounter with the officer, Jason Flanery, who was working an off-duty security detail for a private company. Police had said Mr. Myers, 18, who was black, shot a stolen handgun before Officer Flanery, who is white, returned fire. Prosecutors said in their report that witnesses had seen gunfire coming from both directions and from two guns and that a semiautomatic pistol had been recovered next to Mr. Myers\u2019s body. Mr. Myers\u2019s family disputed the police account and insisted that he had been unarmed . Protesters marched for several nights after the shooting, and some drew parallels between Mr. Myers\u2019s death and that of Mr. Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old shot by a white Ferguson officer in August. In a statement, Ms. Joyce expressed condolences to the Myers family and called his death \u201ca tragic situation for our entire community.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Prosecutors in St. Louis will not charge the police officer who fatally shot VonDerrit D. Myers Jr. in October, a shooting that renewed tensions with law enforcement weeks after Michael Brown was killed by an officer in nearby Ferguson. In a report released Monday, Jennifer M. Joyce, the circuit attorney for St. Louis, found that Mr. Myers \u201cproduced a gun\u201d during the encounter with the officer, Jason Flanery, who was working an off-duty security detail for a private company. Police had said Mr. Myers, 18, who was black, shot a stolen handgun before Officer Flanery, who is white, returned fire. Prosecutors said in their report that witnesses had seen gunfire coming from both directions and from two guns and that a semiautomatic pistol had been recovered next to Mr. Myers\u2019s body. Mr. Myers\u2019s family disputed the police account and insisted that he had been unarmed . Protesters marched for several nights after the shooting, and some drew parallels between Mr. Myers\u2019s death and that of Mr. Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old shot by a white Ferguson officer in August. In a statement, Ms. Joyce expressed condolences to the Myers family and called his death \u201ca tragic situation for our entire community.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Myers\u2019s family disputed the police account and insisted that he had been unarmed ."} +{"question": "In what role was officer Flanery working on the night of the shooting?", "paragraph": "Prosecutors in St. Louis will not charge the police officer who fatally shot VonDerrit D. Myers Jr. in October, a shooting that renewed tensions with law enforcement weeks after Michael Brown was killed by an officer in nearby Ferguson. In a report released Monday, Jennifer M. Joyce, the circuit attorney for St. Louis, found that Mr. Myers \u201cproduced a gun\u201d during the encounter with the officer, Jason Flanery, who was working an off-duty security detail for a private company. Police had said Mr. Myers, 18, who was black, shot a stolen handgun before Officer Flanery, who is white, returned fire. Prosecutors said in their report that witnesses had seen gunfire coming from both directions and from two guns and that a semiautomatic pistol had been recovered next to Mr. Myers\u2019s body. Mr. Myers\u2019s family disputed the police account and insisted that he had been unarmed. Protesters marched for several nights after the shooting, and some drew parallels between Mr. Myers\u2019s death and that of Mr. Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old shot by a white Ferguson officer in August. In a statement, Ms. Joyce expressed condolences to the Myers family and called his death \u201ca tragic situation for our entire community.\u201d", "answer": "an off-duty security detail for a private company", "sentence": "In a report released Monday, Jennifer M. Joyce, the circuit attorney for St. Louis, found that Mr. Myers \u201cproduced a gun\u201d during the encounter with the officer, Jason Flanery, who was working an off-duty security detail for a private company .", "paragraph_sentence": "Prosecutors in St. Louis will not charge the police officer who fatally shot VonDerrit D. Myers Jr. in October, a shooting that renewed tensions with law enforcement weeks after Michael Brown was killed by an officer in nearby Ferguson. In a report released Monday, Jennifer M. Joyce, the circuit attorney for St. Louis, found that Mr. Myers \u201cproduced a gun\u201d during the encounter with the officer, Jason Flanery, who was working an off-duty security detail for a private company . Police had said Mr. Myers, 18, who was black, shot a stolen handgun before Officer Flanery, who is white, returned fire. Prosecutors said in their report that witnesses had seen gunfire coming from both directions and from two guns and that a semiautomatic pistol had been recovered next to Mr. Myers\u2019s body. Mr. Myers\u2019s family disputed the police account and insisted that he had been unarmed. Protesters marched for several nights after the shooting, and some drew parallels between Mr. Myers\u2019s death and that of Mr. Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old shot by a white Ferguson officer in August. In a statement, Ms. Joyce expressed condolences to the Myers family and called his death \u201ca tragic situation for our entire community.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Prosecutors in St. Louis will not charge the police officer who fatally shot VonDerrit D. Myers Jr. in October, a shooting that renewed tensions with law enforcement weeks after Michael Brown was killed by an officer in nearby Ferguson. In a report released Monday, Jennifer M. Joyce, the circuit attorney for St. Louis, found that Mr. Myers \u201cproduced a gun\u201d during the encounter with the officer, Jason Flanery, who was working an off-duty security detail for a private company . Police had said Mr. Myers, 18, who was black, shot a stolen handgun before Officer Flanery, who is white, returned fire. Prosecutors said in their report that witnesses had seen gunfire coming from both directions and from two guns and that a semiautomatic pistol had been recovered next to Mr. Myers\u2019s body. Mr. Myers\u2019s family disputed the police account and insisted that he had been unarmed. Protesters marched for several nights after the shooting, and some drew parallels between Mr. Myers\u2019s death and that of Mr. Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old shot by a white Ferguson officer in August. In a statement, Ms. Joyce expressed condolences to the Myers family and called his death \u201ca tragic situation for our entire community.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In a report released Monday, Jennifer M. Joyce, the circuit attorney for St. Louis, found that Mr. Myers \u201cproduced a gun\u201d during the encounter with the officer, Jason Flanery, who was working an off-duty security detail for a private company ."} +{"question": "What church had a vote on wednesday?", "paragraph": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church. It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million, which is the number outside the United States.", "answer": "the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)", "sentence": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church.", "paragraph_sentence": " An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church. It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million, which is the number outside the United States.", "paragraph_answer": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church. It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million, which is the number outside the United States.", "sentence_answer": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church."} +{"question": "The vote was to change it's definition of marriage to include what?", "paragraph": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church. It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million, which is the number outside the United States.", "answer": "to include same-sex marriage", "sentence": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church.", "paragraph_sentence": " An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church. It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million, which is the number outside the United States.", "paragraph_answer": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church. It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million, which is the number outside the United States.", "sentence_answer": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church."} +{"question": "The membership of the united Methodist church was misstated as being what number of people worldwide?", "paragraph": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church. It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million, which is the number outside the United States.", "answer": "5.5 million", "sentence": "It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million , which is the number outside the United States.", "paragraph_sentence": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church. It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million , which is the number outside the United States. ", "paragraph_answer": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church. It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million , which is the number outside the United States.", "sentence_answer": "It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million , which is the number outside the United States."} +{"question": "Where are the misstated 5.5 million actually located?", "paragraph": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church. It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million, which is the number outside the United States.", "answer": "the number outside the United States.", "sentence": "It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million, which is the number outside the United States.", "paragraph_sentence": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church. It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million, which is the number outside the United States. ", "paragraph_answer": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church. It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million, which is the number outside the United States. ", "sentence_answer": "It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million, which is the number outside the United States. "} +{"question": "What is the actual number of United Methodist Church members worldwide?", "paragraph": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church. It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million, which is the number outside the United States.", "answer": "12.8 million worldwide", "sentence": "It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million, which is the number outside the United States.", "paragraph_sentence": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church. It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million, which is the number outside the United States. ", "paragraph_answer": "An article on Wednesday about a vote by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to change its definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage misstated the membership of the United Methodist Church. It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million, which is the number outside the United States.", "sentence_answer": "It is 12.8 million worldwide \u2014 not 5.5 million, which is the number outside the United States."} +{"question": "who experienced playing pro basketball in Russia?", "paragraph": "An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi\u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated. It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, which is in St. Petersburg. THE ARTS A listing of credits on Wednesday with a theater review of \u201cThe Evening,\u201d at the Kitchen in Manhattan, omitted two organizations that are presenting the play in addition to New York City Players. They are the Kitchen and Performance Space 122.", "answer": "Diana Taurasi", "sentence": "An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi \u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated.", "paragraph_sentence": " An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi \u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated. It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, which is in St. Petersburg. THE ARTS A listing of credits on Wednesday with a theater review of \u201cThe Evening,\u201d at the Kitchen in Manhattan, omitted two organizations that are presenting the play in addition to New York City Players. They are the Kitchen and Performance Space 122.", "paragraph_answer": "An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi \u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated. It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, which is in St. Petersburg. THE ARTS A listing of credits on Wednesday with a theater review of \u201cThe Evening,\u201d at the Kitchen in Manhattan, omitted two organizations that are presenting the play in addition to New York City Players. They are the Kitchen and Performance Space 122.", "sentence_answer": "An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi \u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated."} +{"question": "The article about Diana misidentified the church there in Yekaterinburg Russia, what is the accurate name?", "paragraph": "An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi\u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated. It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, which is in St. Petersburg. THE ARTS A listing of credits on Wednesday with a theater review of \u201cThe Evening,\u201d at the Kitchen in Manhattan, omitted two organizations that are presenting the play in addition to New York City Players. They are the Kitchen and Performance Space 122.", "answer": "It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land", "sentence": "It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, which is in St. Petersburg.", "paragraph_sentence": "An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi\u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated. It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, which is in St. Petersburg. THE ARTS A listing of credits on Wednesday with a theater review of \u201cThe Evening,\u201d at the Kitchen in Manhattan, omitted two organizations that are presenting the play in addition to New York City Players. They are the Kitchen and Performance Space 122.", "paragraph_answer": "An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi\u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated. It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, which is in St. Petersburg. THE ARTS A listing of credits on Wednesday with a theater review of \u201cThe Evening,\u201d at the Kitchen in Manhattan, omitted two organizations that are presenting the play in addition to New York City Players. They are the Kitchen and Performance Space 122.", "sentence_answer": " It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, which is in St. Petersburg."} +{"question": "Who was assassinated in the location in which the church was built?", "paragraph": "An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi\u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated. It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, which is in St. Petersburg. THE ARTS A listing of credits on Wednesday with a theater review of \u201cThe Evening,\u201d at the Kitchen in Manhattan, omitted two organizations that are presenting the play in addition to New York City Players. They are the Kitchen and Performance Space 122.", "answer": "the Romanovs", "sentence": "An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi\u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated.", "paragraph_sentence": " An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi\u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated. It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, which is in St. Petersburg. THE ARTS A listing of credits on Wednesday with a theater review of \u201cThe Evening,\u201d at the Kitchen in Manhattan, omitted two organizations that are presenting the play in addition to New York City Players. They are the Kitchen and Performance Space 122.", "paragraph_answer": "An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi\u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated. It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, which is in St. Petersburg. THE ARTS A listing of credits on Wednesday with a theater review of \u201cThe Evening,\u201d at the Kitchen in Manhattan, omitted two organizations that are presenting the play in addition to New York City Players. They are the Kitchen and Performance Space 122.", "sentence_answer": "An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi\u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated."} +{"question": "What two organizations are helping to present a play alongside the New York City Players?", "paragraph": "An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi\u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated. It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, which is in St. Petersburg. THE ARTS A listing of credits on Wednesday with a theater review of \u201cThe Evening,\u201d at the Kitchen in Manhattan, omitted two organizations that are presenting the play in addition to New York City Players. They are the Kitchen and Performance Space 122.", "answer": "the Kitchen and Performance Space 122", "sentence": "They are the Kitchen and Performance Space 122 .", "paragraph_sentence": "An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi\u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated. It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, which is in St. Petersburg. THE ARTS A listing of credits on Wednesday with a theater review of \u201cThe Evening,\u201d at the Kitchen in Manhattan, omitted two organizations that are presenting the play in addition to New York City Players. They are the Kitchen and Performance Space 122 . ", "paragraph_answer": "An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi\u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated. It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, which is in St. Petersburg. THE ARTS A listing of credits on Wednesday with a theater review of \u201cThe Evening,\u201d at the Kitchen in Manhattan, omitted two organizations that are presenting the play in addition to New York City Players. They are the Kitchen and Performance Space 122 .", "sentence_answer": "They are the Kitchen and Performance Space 122 ."} +{"question": "It was misstated as being what church from St. Petersburg?", "paragraph": "An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi\u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated. It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, which is in St. Petersburg. THE ARTS A listing of credits on Wednesday with a theater review of \u201cThe Evening,\u201d at the Kitchen in Manhattan, omitted two organizations that are presenting the play in addition to New York City Players. They are the Kitchen and Performance Space 122.", "answer": "the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood", "sentence": "It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood , which is in St. Petersburg.", "paragraph_sentence": "An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi\u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated. It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood , which is in St. Petersburg. THE ARTS A listing of credits on Wednesday with a theater review of \u201cThe Evening,\u201d at the Kitchen in Manhattan, omitted two organizations that are presenting the play in addition to New York City Players. They are the Kitchen and Performance Space 122.", "paragraph_answer": "An article on Wednesday about Diana Taurasi\u2019s experiences playing professional basketball in Yekaterinburg, Russia, misidentified the church there that is built over the cellar where the Romanovs were assassinated. It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood , which is in St. Petersburg. THE ARTS A listing of credits on Wednesday with a theater review of \u201cThe Evening,\u201d at the Kitchen in Manhattan, omitted two organizations that are presenting the play in addition to New York City Players. They are the Kitchen and Performance Space 122.", "sentence_answer": "It is the Church on Blood in Honor of All Saints Resplendent in the Russian Land \u2014 not the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood , which is in St. Petersburg."} +{"question": "What time is \"The Dreamers\" on tonight on Starz Cinema?", "paragraph": "8:05 P.M. (Starz Cinema) THE DREAMERS (2004) Louis Garrel (top), Eva Green (center) and Michael Pitt (above) portray the points of a photogenic triangle in this drama from Bernardo Bertolucci (\u201cLast Tango in Paris\u201d) about an American who befriends French twins in Paris during the 1968 student riots. This adaptation of Gilbert Adair\u2019s novel \u201cThe Holy Innocents\u201d is \u201cdisarmingly sweet and completely enchanting,\u201d A. O. Scott wrote in The New York Times. \u201cThe sex in this movie is, as measured by the display of body parts and the amount of time the actors spend out of their clothes, more explicit than even the most notorious scenes in \u2018Last Tango,\u2019 \u201d he said. \u201cBut it is hard to imagine a voyeur more benevolent than Mr. Bertolucci, whose eager scrutiny of the eros of the young is, like Jeremy Irons\u2019s in \u2018Stealing Beauty,\u2019 less a matter of prurience than of an honest, nostalgic appreciation of natural human vitality.\u201d 8:30 P.M. (TV5Monde) ELLES \u00c9TAIENT EN GUERRE (1914-18) Nathalie Baye narrates this 2014 French documentary, which examines World War I from the perspective of Marie Curie, Edith Wharton, Mata Hari, Rosa Luxemburg and Louise Bodin.", "answer": "8:05 P.M.", "sentence": "8:05 P.M. (Starz Cinema)", "paragraph_sentence": " 8:05 P.M. (Starz Cinema) THE DREAMERS (2004) Louis Garrel (top), Eva Green (center) and Michael Pitt (above) portray the points of a photogenic triangle in this drama from Bernardo Bertolucci (\u201cLast Tango in Paris\u201d) about an American who befriends French twins in Paris during the 1968 student riots. This adaptation of Gilbert Adair\u2019s novel \u201cThe Holy Innocents\u201d is \u201cdisarmingly sweet and completely enchanting,\u201d A. O. Scott wrote in The New York Times. \u201cThe sex in this movie is, as measured by the display of body parts and the amount of time the actors spend out of their clothes, more explicit than even the most notorious scenes in \u2018Last Tango,\u2019 \u201d he said. \u201cBut it is hard to imagine a voyeur more benevolent than Mr. Bertolucci, whose eager scrutiny of the eros of the young is, like Jeremy Irons\u2019s in \u2018Stealing Beauty,\u2019 less a matter of prurience than of an honest, nostalgic appreciation of natural human vitality.\u201d 8:30 P.M. (TV5Monde) ELLES \u00c9TAIENT EN GUERRE (1914-18) Nathalie Baye narrates this 2014 French documentary, which examines World War I from the perspective of Marie Curie, Edith Wharton, Mata Hari, Rosa Luxemburg and Louise Bodin.", "paragraph_answer": " 8:05 P.M. (Starz Cinema) THE DREAMERS (2004) Louis Garrel (top), Eva Green (center) and Michael Pitt (above) portray the points of a photogenic triangle in this drama from Bernardo Bertolucci (\u201cLast Tango in Paris\u201d) about an American who befriends French twins in Paris during the 1968 student riots. This adaptation of Gilbert Adair\u2019s novel \u201cThe Holy Innocents\u201d is \u201cdisarmingly sweet and completely enchanting,\u201d A. O. Scott wrote in The New York Times. \u201cThe sex in this movie is, as measured by the display of body parts and the amount of time the actors spend out of their clothes, more explicit than even the most notorious scenes in \u2018Last Tango,\u2019 \u201d he said. \u201cBut it is hard to imagine a voyeur more benevolent than Mr. Bertolucci, whose eager scrutiny of the eros of the young is, like Jeremy Irons\u2019s in \u2018Stealing Beauty,\u2019 less a matter of prurience than of an honest, nostalgic appreciation of natural human vitality.\u201d 8:30 P.M. (TV5Monde) ELLES \u00c9TAIENT EN GUERRE (1914-18) Nathalie Baye narrates this 2014 French documentary, which examines World War I from the perspective of Marie Curie, Edith Wharton, Mata Hari, Rosa Luxemburg and Louise Bodin.", "sentence_answer": " 8:05 P.M. (Starz Cinema)"} +{"question": "What year does the movie \"The Dreamers\" take place in?", "paragraph": "8:05 P.M. (Starz Cinema) THE DREAMERS (2004) Louis Garrel (top), Eva Green (center) and Michael Pitt (above) portray the points of a photogenic triangle in this drama from Bernardo Bertolucci (\u201cLast Tango in Paris\u201d) about an American who befriends French twins in Paris during the 1968 student riots. This adaptation of Gilbert Adair\u2019s novel \u201cThe Holy Innocents\u201d is \u201cdisarmingly sweet and completely enchanting,\u201d A. O. Scott wrote in The New York Times. \u201cThe sex in this movie is, as measured by the display of body parts and the amount of time the actors spend out of their clothes, more explicit than even the most notorious scenes in \u2018Last Tango,\u2019 \u201d he said. \u201cBut it is hard to imagine a voyeur more benevolent than Mr. Bertolucci, whose eager scrutiny of the eros of the young is, like Jeremy Irons\u2019s in \u2018Stealing Beauty,\u2019 less a matter of prurience than of an honest, nostalgic appreciation of natural human vitality.\u201d 8:30 P.M. (TV5Monde) ELLES \u00c9TAIENT EN GUERRE (1914-18) Nathalie Baye narrates this 2014 French documentary, which examines World War I from the perspective of Marie Curie, Edith Wharton, Mata Hari, Rosa Luxemburg and Louise Bodin.", "answer": "1968", "sentence": "THE DREAMERS (2004) Louis Garrel (top), Eva Green (center) and Michael Pitt (above) portray the points of a photogenic triangle in this drama from Bernardo Bertolucci (\u201cLast Tango in Paris\u201d) about an American who befriends French twins in Paris during the 1968 student riots.", "paragraph_sentence": "8:05 P.M. (Starz Cinema) THE DREAMERS (2004) Louis Garrel (top), Eva Green (center) and Michael Pitt (above) portray the points of a photogenic triangle in this drama from Bernardo Bertolucci (\u201cLast Tango in Paris\u201d) about an American who befriends French twins in Paris during the 1968 student riots. This adaptation of Gilbert Adair\u2019s novel \u201cThe Holy Innocents\u201d is \u201cdisarmingly sweet and completely enchanting,\u201d A. O. Scott wrote in The New York Times. \u201cThe sex in this movie is, as measured by the display of body parts and the amount of time the actors spend out of their clothes, more explicit than even the most notorious scenes in \u2018Last Tango,\u2019 \u201d he said. \u201cBut it is hard to imagine a voyeur more benevolent than Mr. Bertolucci, whose eager scrutiny of the eros of the young is, like Jeremy Irons\u2019s in \u2018Stealing Beauty,\u2019 less a matter of prurience than of an honest, nostalgic appreciation of natural human vitality.\u201d 8:30 P.M. (TV5Monde) ELLES \u00c9TAIENT EN GUERRE (1914-18) Nathalie Baye narrates this 2014 French documentary, which examines World War I from the perspective of Marie Curie, Edith Wharton, Mata Hari, Rosa Luxemburg and Louise Bodin.", "paragraph_answer": "8:05 P.M. (Starz Cinema) THE DREAMERS (2004) Louis Garrel (top), Eva Green (center) and Michael Pitt (above) portray the points of a photogenic triangle in this drama from Bernardo Bertolucci (\u201cLast Tango in Paris\u201d) about an American who befriends French twins in Paris during the 1968 student riots. This adaptation of Gilbert Adair\u2019s novel \u201cThe Holy Innocents\u201d is \u201cdisarmingly sweet and completely enchanting,\u201d A. O. Scott wrote in The New York Times. \u201cThe sex in this movie is, as measured by the display of body parts and the amount of time the actors spend out of their clothes, more explicit than even the most notorious scenes in \u2018Last Tango,\u2019 \u201d he said. \u201cBut it is hard to imagine a voyeur more benevolent than Mr. Bertolucci, whose eager scrutiny of the eros of the young is, like Jeremy Irons\u2019s in \u2018Stealing Beauty,\u2019 less a matter of prurience than of an honest, nostalgic appreciation of natural human vitality.\u201d 8:30 P.M. (TV5Monde) ELLES \u00c9TAIENT EN GUERRE (1914-18) Nathalie Baye narrates this 2014 French documentary, which examines World War I from the perspective of Marie Curie, Edith Wharton, Mata Hari, Rosa Luxemburg and Louise Bodin.", "sentence_answer": "THE DREAMERS (2004) Louis Garrel (top), Eva Green (center) and Michael Pitt (above) portray the points of a photogenic triangle in this drama from Bernardo Bertolucci (\u201cLast Tango in Paris\u201d) about an American who befriends French twins in Paris during the 1968 student riots."} +{"question": "Who does A. O. Scott write for?", "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": "The New York Times", "sentence": "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 .", "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": "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 ."} +{"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."} +{"question": "The 2014 French documentary on at 8:30 P.M. examines what war?", "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": "World War I", "sentence": "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": "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."} +{"question": "What network is \"Empire\" on tonight at 9 P.M.", "paragraph": "9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement. Phil (Ty Burrell), Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Luke (Nolan Gould) set out to destroy the drone used by a neighbor to spy on Gloria (Sofia Vergara) as she sunbathes. In \u201cblack-ish,\u201d at 9:30, Dre (Anthony Anderson) tries to make up for his last-minute wedding with Bow (Tracee Ellis Ross) by planning an elaborate vow-renewal for their 15th anniversary. Then her hippie parents (Anna Deavere Smith and Beau Bridges) show up unannounced. 9 P.M. (Fox) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her. Lucious (Terrence Howard) confronts his longtime rival, Billy Beretti (Judd Nelson). And the Lyon sons go to extremes to save Empire Entertainment.", "answer": "Fox", "sentence": "9 P.M. ( Fox ) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her.", "paragraph_sentence": "9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement. Phil (Ty Burrell), Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Luke (Nolan Gould) set out to destroy the drone used by a neighbor to spy on Gloria (Sofia Vergara) as she sunbathes. In \u201cblack-ish,\u201d at 9:30, Dre (Anthony Anderson) tries to make up for his last-minute wedding with Bow (Tracee Ellis Ross) by planning an elaborate vow-renewal for their 15th anniversary. Then her hippie parents (Anna Deavere Smith and Beau Bridges) show up unannounced. 9 P.M. ( Fox ) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her. Lucious (Terrence Howard) confronts his longtime rival, Billy Beretti (Judd Nelson). And the Lyon sons go to extremes to save Empire Entertainment.", "paragraph_answer": "9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement. Phil (Ty Burrell), Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Luke (Nolan Gould) set out to destroy the drone used by a neighbor to spy on Gloria (Sofia Vergara) as she sunbathes. In \u201cblack-ish,\u201d at 9:30, Dre (Anthony Anderson) tries to make up for his last-minute wedding with Bow (Tracee Ellis Ross) by planning an elaborate vow-renewal for their 15th anniversary. Then her hippie parents (Anna Deavere Smith and Beau Bridges) show up unannounced. 9 P.M. ( Fox ) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her. Lucious (Terrence Howard) confronts his longtime rival, Billy Beretti (Judd Nelson). And the Lyon sons go to extremes to save Empire Entertainment.", "sentence_answer": "9 P.M. ( Fox ) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her."} +{"question": "What time is \"Modern Family\" on?", "paragraph": "9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement. Phil (Ty Burrell), Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Luke (Nolan Gould) set out to destroy the drone used by a neighbor to spy on Gloria (Sofia Vergara) as she sunbathes. In \u201cblack-ish,\u201d at 9:30, Dre (Anthony Anderson) tries to make up for his last-minute wedding with Bow (Tracee Ellis Ross) by planning an elaborate vow-renewal for their 15th anniversary. Then her hippie parents (Anna Deavere Smith and Beau Bridges) show up unannounced. 9 P.M. (Fox) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her. Lucious (Terrence Howard) confronts his longtime rival, Billy Beretti (Judd Nelson). And the Lyon sons go to extremes to save Empire Entertainment.", "answer": "9 P.M.", "sentence": "9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement.", "paragraph_sentence": " 9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement. Phil (Ty Burrell), Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Luke (Nolan Gould) set out to destroy the drone used by a neighbor to spy on Gloria (Sofia Vergara) as she sunbathes. In \u201cblack-ish,\u201d at 9:30, Dre (Anthony Anderson) tries to make up for his last-minute wedding with Bow (Tracee Ellis Ross) by planning an elaborate vow-renewal for their 15th anniversary. Then her hippie parents (Anna Deavere Smith and Beau Bridges) show up unannounced. 9 P.M. (Fox) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her. Lucious (Terrence Howard) confronts his longtime rival, Billy Beretti (Judd Nelson). And the Lyon sons go to extremes to save Empire Entertainment.", "paragraph_answer": " 9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement. Phil (Ty Burrell), Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Luke (Nolan Gould) set out to destroy the drone used by a neighbor to spy on Gloria (Sofia Vergara) as she sunbathes. In \u201cblack-ish,\u201d at 9:30, Dre (Anthony Anderson) tries to make up for his last-minute wedding with Bow (Tracee Ellis Ross) by planning an elaborate vow-renewal for their 15th anniversary. Then her hippie parents (Anna Deavere Smith and Beau Bridges) show up unannounced. 9 P.M. (Fox) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her. Lucious (Terrence Howard) confronts his longtime rival, Billy Beretti (Judd Nelson). And the Lyon sons go to extremes to save Empire Entertainment.", "sentence_answer": " 9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement."} +{"question": "Who plays Phil in \"Modern Family\"?", "paragraph": "9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement. Phil (Ty Burrell), Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Luke (Nolan Gould) set out to destroy the drone used by a neighbor to spy on Gloria (Sofia Vergara) as she sunbathes. In \u201cblack-ish,\u201d at 9:30, Dre (Anthony Anderson) tries to make up for his last-minute wedding with Bow (Tracee Ellis Ross) by planning an elaborate vow-renewal for their 15th anniversary. Then her hippie parents (Anna Deavere Smith and Beau Bridges) show up unannounced. 9 P.M. (Fox) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her. Lucious (Terrence Howard) confronts his longtime rival, Billy Beretti (Judd Nelson). And the Lyon sons go to extremes to save Empire Entertainment.", "answer": "Ty Burrell", "sentence": "Phil ( Ty Burrell ), Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Luke (Nolan Gould) set out to destroy the drone used by a neighbor to spy on Gloria (Sofia Vergara) as she sunbathes.", "paragraph_sentence": "9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement. Phil ( Ty Burrell ), Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Luke (Nolan Gould) set out to destroy the drone used by a neighbor to spy on Gloria (Sofia Vergara) as she sunbathes. In \u201cblack-ish,\u201d at 9:30, Dre (Anthony Anderson) tries to make up for his last-minute wedding with Bow (Tracee Ellis Ross) by planning an elaborate vow-renewal for their 15th anniversary. Then her hippie parents (Anna Deavere Smith and Beau Bridges) show up unannounced. 9 P.M. (Fox) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her. Lucious (Terrence Howard) confronts his longtime rival, Billy Beretti (Judd Nelson). And the Lyon sons go to extremes to save Empire Entertainment.", "paragraph_answer": "9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement. Phil ( Ty Burrell ), Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Luke (Nolan Gould) set out to destroy the drone used by a neighbor to spy on Gloria (Sofia Vergara) as she sunbathes. In \u201cblack-ish,\u201d at 9:30, Dre (Anthony Anderson) tries to make up for his last-minute wedding with Bow (Tracee Ellis Ross) by planning an elaborate vow-renewal for their 15th anniversary. Then her hippie parents (Anna Deavere Smith and Beau Bridges) show up unannounced. 9 P.M. (Fox) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her. Lucious (Terrence Howard) confronts his longtime rival, Billy Beretti (Judd Nelson). And the Lyon sons go to extremes to save Empire Entertainment.", "sentence_answer": "Phil ( Ty Burrell ), Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Luke (Nolan Gould) set out to destroy the drone used by a neighbor to spy on Gloria (Sofia Vergara) as she sunbathes."} +{"question": "Who back-stabbed Cookie on the show \"Empire\"?", "paragraph": "9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement. Phil (Ty Burrell), Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Luke (Nolan Gould) set out to destroy the drone used by a neighbor to spy on Gloria (Sofia Vergara) as she sunbathes. In \u201cblack-ish,\u201d at 9:30, Dre (Anthony Anderson) tries to make up for his last-minute wedding with Bow (Tracee Ellis Ross) by planning an elaborate vow-renewal for their 15th anniversary. Then her hippie parents (Anna Deavere Smith and Beau Bridges) show up unannounced. 9 P.M. (Fox) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her. Lucious (Terrence Howard) confronts his longtime rival, Billy Beretti (Judd Nelson). And the Lyon sons go to extremes to save Empire Entertainment.", "answer": "Anika", "sentence": "9 P.M. (Fox) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her.", "paragraph_sentence": "9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement. Phil (Ty Burrell), Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Luke (Nolan Gould) set out to destroy the drone used by a neighbor to spy on Gloria (Sofia Vergara) as she sunbathes. In \u201cblack-ish,\u201d at 9:30, Dre (Anthony Anderson) tries to make up for his last-minute wedding with Bow (Tracee Ellis Ross) by planning an elaborate vow-renewal for their 15th anniversary. Then her hippie parents (Anna Deavere Smith and Beau Bridges) show up unannounced. 9 P.M. (Fox) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her. Lucious (Terrence Howard) confronts his longtime rival, Billy Beretti (Judd Nelson). And the Lyon sons go to extremes to save Empire Entertainment.", "paragraph_answer": "9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement. Phil (Ty Burrell), Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Luke (Nolan Gould) set out to destroy the drone used by a neighbor to spy on Gloria (Sofia Vergara) as she sunbathes. In \u201cblack-ish,\u201d at 9:30, Dre (Anthony Anderson) tries to make up for his last-minute wedding with Bow (Tracee Ellis Ross) by planning an elaborate vow-renewal for their 15th anniversary. Then her hippie parents (Anna Deavere Smith and Beau Bridges) show up unannounced. 9 P.M. (Fox) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her. Lucious (Terrence Howard) confronts his longtime rival, Billy Beretti (Judd Nelson). And the Lyon sons go to extremes to save Empire Entertainment.", "sentence_answer": "9 P.M. (Fox) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her."} +{"question": "In \"Empire\" tonight Lyon goes to the extremes to save what?", "paragraph": "9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement. Phil (Ty Burrell), Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Luke (Nolan Gould) set out to destroy the drone used by a neighbor to spy on Gloria (Sofia Vergara) as she sunbathes. In \u201cblack-ish,\u201d at 9:30, Dre (Anthony Anderson) tries to make up for his last-minute wedding with Bow (Tracee Ellis Ross) by planning an elaborate vow-renewal for their 15th anniversary. Then her hippie parents (Anna Deavere Smith and Beau Bridges) show up unannounced. 9 P.M. (Fox) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her. Lucious (Terrence Howard) confronts his longtime rival, Billy Beretti (Judd Nelson). And the Lyon sons go to extremes to save Empire Entertainment.", "answer": "Empire Entertainment", "sentence": "And the Lyon sons go to extremes to save Empire Entertainment .", "paragraph_sentence": "9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement. Phil (Ty Burrell), Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Luke (Nolan Gould) set out to destroy the drone used by a neighbor to spy on Gloria (Sofia Vergara) as she sunbathes. In \u201cblack-ish,\u201d at 9:30, Dre (Anthony Anderson) tries to make up for his last-minute wedding with Bow (Tracee Ellis Ross) by planning an elaborate vow-renewal for their 15th anniversary. Then her hippie parents (Anna Deavere Smith and Beau Bridges) show up unannounced. 9 P.M. (Fox) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her. Lucious (Terrence Howard) confronts his longtime rival, Billy Beretti (Judd Nelson). And the Lyon sons go to extremes to save Empire Entertainment . ", "paragraph_answer": "9 P.M. (ABC) MODERN FAMILY Jay (Ed O\u2019Neill) and Claire (Julie Bowen) have creative differences when they shoot a commercial for Pritchett Closets in response to their competitor\u2019s clever advertisement. Phil (Ty Burrell), Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Luke (Nolan Gould) set out to destroy the drone used by a neighbor to spy on Gloria (Sofia Vergara) as she sunbathes. In \u201cblack-ish,\u201d at 9:30, Dre (Anthony Anderson) tries to make up for his last-minute wedding with Bow (Tracee Ellis Ross) by planning an elaborate vow-renewal for their 15th anniversary. Then her hippie parents (Anna Deavere Smith and Beau Bridges) show up unannounced. 9 P.M. (Fox) EMPIRE Cookie (Taraji P. Henson, left) declares war when she learns how Anika (Grace Gealey) back-stabbed her. Lucious (Terrence Howard) confronts his longtime rival, Billy Beretti (Judd Nelson). And the Lyon sons go to extremes to save Empire Entertainment .", "sentence_answer": "And the Lyon sons go to extremes to save Empire Entertainment ."} +{"question": "What could possibly power the sun?", "paragraph": "Maybe the sun wasn\u2019t really powered by fusion. Or maybe neutrinos were eaten by a black hole lurking inside. By the time I met Dr. McDonald, theorists had rallied around a less radical thought.", "answer": "fusion", "sentence": "Maybe the sun wasn\u2019t really powered by fusion .", "paragraph_sentence": " Maybe the sun wasn\u2019t really powered by fusion . Or maybe neutrinos were eaten by a black hole lurking inside. By the time I met Dr. McDonald, theorists had rallied around a less radical thought.", "paragraph_answer": "Maybe the sun wasn\u2019t really powered by fusion . Or maybe neutrinos were eaten by a black hole lurking inside. By the time I met Dr. McDonald, theorists had rallied around a less radical thought.", "sentence_answer": "Maybe the sun wasn\u2019t really powered by fusion ."} +{"question": "What may be eating neutrinos?", "paragraph": "Maybe the sun wasn\u2019t really powered by fusion. Or maybe neutrinos were eaten by a black hole lurking inside. By the time I met Dr. McDonald, theorists had rallied around a less radical thought.", "answer": "black hole", "sentence": "a black hole lurking inside.", "paragraph_sentence": "Maybe the sun wasn\u2019t really powered by fusion. Or maybe neutrinos were eaten by a black hole lurking inside. By the time I met Dr. McDonald, theorists had rallied around a less radical thought.", "paragraph_answer": "Maybe the sun wasn\u2019t really powered by fusion. Or maybe neutrinos were eaten by a black hole lurking inside. By the time I met Dr. McDonald, theorists had rallied around a less radical thought.", "sentence_answer": "a black hole lurking inside."} +{"question": "What star may not be powered by fusion?", "paragraph": "Maybe the sun wasn\u2019t really powered by fusion. Or maybe neutrinos were eaten by a black hole lurking inside. By the time I met Dr. McDonald, theorists had rallied around a less radical thought.", "answer": "sun", "sentence": "Maybe the sun wasn\u2019t really powered by fusion.", "paragraph_sentence": " Maybe the sun wasn\u2019t really powered by fusion. Or maybe neutrinos were eaten by a black hole lurking inside. By the time I met Dr. McDonald, theorists had rallied around a less radical thought.", "paragraph_answer": "Maybe the sun wasn\u2019t really powered by fusion. Or maybe neutrinos were eaten by a black hole lurking inside. By the time I met Dr. McDonald, theorists had rallied around a less radical thought.", "sentence_answer": "Maybe the sun wasn\u2019t really powered by fusion."} +{"question": "Which professor did the author of post meet?", "paragraph": "Maybe the sun wasn\u2019t really powered by fusion. Or maybe neutrinos were eaten by a black hole lurking inside. By the time I met Dr. McDonald, theorists had rallied around a less radical thought.", "answer": "Dr. McDonald", "sentence": "By the time I met Dr. McDonald , theorists had rallied around a less radical thought.", "paragraph_sentence": "Maybe the sun wasn\u2019t really powered by fusion. Or maybe neutrinos were eaten by a black hole lurking inside. By the time I met Dr. McDonald , theorists had rallied around a less radical thought. ", "paragraph_answer": "Maybe the sun wasn\u2019t really powered by fusion. Or maybe neutrinos were eaten by a black hole lurking inside. By the time I met Dr. McDonald , theorists had rallied around a less radical thought.", "sentence_answer": "By the time I met Dr. McDonald , theorists had rallied around a less radical thought."} +{"question": "What does Begley make no mention of?", "paragraph": "Third, Begley makes no mention of the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility, which would include the novels of Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Szczypiorski and films by Andrzej Wajda, Jerzy Kawalerowicz and Wanda Jakubowska. There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English. Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s. Poles are now \u201cworking through the past\u201d \u2014 as Theodor Adorno put it \u2014 in a way comparable to the collective memory work of Germans since the 1960s. Last year\u2019s opening of a Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw is only the most visible sign of this.", "answer": "the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility", "sentence": "Third, Begley makes no mention of the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility , which would include the novels of Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Szczypiorski and films by Andrzej Wajda, Jerzy Kawalerowicz and Wanda Jakubowska.", "paragraph_sentence": " Third, Begley makes no mention of the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility , which would include the novels of Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Szczypiorski and films by Andrzej Wajda, Jerzy Kawalerowicz and Wanda Jakubowska. There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English. Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s. Poles are now \u201cworking through the past\u201d \u2014 as Theodor Adorno put it \u2014 in a way comparable to the collective memory work of Germans since the 1960s. Last year\u2019s opening of a Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw is only the most visible sign of this.", "paragraph_answer": "Third, Begley makes no mention of the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility , which would include the novels of Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Szczypiorski and films by Andrzej Wajda, Jerzy Kawalerowicz and Wanda Jakubowska. There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English. Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s. Poles are now \u201cworking through the past\u201d \u2014 as Theodor Adorno put it \u2014 in a way comparable to the collective memory work of Germans since the 1960s. Last year\u2019s opening of a Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw is only the most visible sign of this.", "sentence_answer": "Third, Begley makes no mention of the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility , which would include the novels of Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Szczypiorski and films by Andrzej Wajda, Jerzy Kawalerowicz and Wanda Jakubowska."} +{"question": "Who did important historical work on the Holocaust?", "paragraph": "Third, Begley makes no mention of the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility, which would include the novels of Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Szczypiorski and films by Andrzej Wajda, Jerzy Kawalerowicz and Wanda Jakubowska. There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English. Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s. Poles are now \u201cworking through the past\u201d \u2014 as Theodor Adorno put it \u2014 in a way comparable to the collective memory work of Germans since the 1960s. Last year\u2019s opening of a Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw is only the most visible sign of this.", "answer": "Poles", "sentence": "There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English.", "paragraph_sentence": "Third, Begley makes no mention of the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility, which would include the novels of Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Szczypiorski and films by Andrzej Wajda, Jerzy Kawalerowicz and Wanda Jakubowska. There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English. Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s. Poles are now \u201cworking through the past\u201d \u2014 as Theodor Adorno put it \u2014 in a way comparable to the collective memory work of Germans since the 1960s. Last year\u2019s opening of a Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw is only the most visible sign of this.", "paragraph_answer": "Third, Begley makes no mention of the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility, which would include the novels of Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Szczypiorski and films by Andrzej Wajda, Jerzy Kawalerowicz and Wanda Jakubowska. There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English. Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s. Poles are now \u201cworking through the past\u201d \u2014 as Theodor Adorno put it \u2014 in a way comparable to the collective memory work of Germans since the 1960s. Last year\u2019s opening of a Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw is only the most visible sign of this.", "sentence_answer": "There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English."} +{"question": "What language are some of Poles' work in?", "paragraph": "Third, Begley makes no mention of the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility, which would include the novels of Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Szczypiorski and films by Andrzej Wajda, Jerzy Kawalerowicz and Wanda Jakubowska. There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English. Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s. Poles are now \u201cworking through the past\u201d \u2014 as Theodor Adorno put it \u2014 in a way comparable to the collective memory work of Germans since the 1960s. Last year\u2019s opening of a Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw is only the most visible sign of this.", "answer": "English", "sentence": "There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English .", "paragraph_sentence": "Third, Begley makes no mention of the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility, which would include the novels of Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Szczypiorski and films by Andrzej Wajda, Jerzy Kawalerowicz and Wanda Jakubowska. There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English . Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s. Poles are now \u201cworking through the past\u201d \u2014 as Theodor Adorno put it \u2014 in a way comparable to the collective memory work of Germans since the 1960s. Last year\u2019s opening of a Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw is only the most visible sign of this.", "paragraph_answer": "Third, Begley makes no mention of the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility, which would include the novels of Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Szczypiorski and films by Andrzej Wajda, Jerzy Kawalerowicz and Wanda Jakubowska. There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English . Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s. Poles are now \u201cworking through the past\u201d \u2014 as Theodor Adorno put it \u2014 in a way comparable to the collective memory work of Germans since the 1960s. Last year\u2019s opening of a Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw is only the most visible sign of this.", "sentence_answer": "There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English ."} +{"question": "What did many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledge?", "paragraph": "Third, Begley makes no mention of the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility, which would include the novels of Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Szczypiorski and films by Andrzej Wajda, Jerzy Kawalerowicz and Wanda Jakubowska. There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English. Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s. Poles are now \u201cworking through the past\u201d \u2014 as Theodor Adorno put it \u2014 in a way comparable to the collective memory work of Germans since the 1960s. Last year\u2019s opening of a Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw is only the most visible sign of this.", "answer": "their collective responsibility", "sentence": "Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s.", "paragraph_sentence": "Third, Begley makes no mention of the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility, which would include the novels of Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Szczypiorski and films by Andrzej Wajda, Jerzy Kawalerowicz and Wanda Jakubowska. There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English. Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s. Poles are now \u201cworking through the past\u201d \u2014 as Theodor Adorno put it \u2014 in a way comparable to the collective memory work of Germans since the 1960s. Last year\u2019s opening of a Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw is only the most visible sign of this.", "paragraph_answer": "Third, Begley makes no mention of the many complex attempts by Polish gentiles to come to terms with the country\u2019s responsibility, which would include the novels of Jerzy Andrzejewski and Andrzej Szczypiorski and films by Andrzej Wajda, Jerzy Kawalerowicz and Wanda Jakubowska. There is also a great deal of important historical work by Poles on the Holocaust, some of which is now available in English. Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s. Poles are now \u201cworking through the past\u201d \u2014 as Theodor Adorno put it \u2014 in a way comparable to the collective memory work of Germans since the 1960s. Last year\u2019s opening of a Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw is only the most visible sign of this.", "sentence_answer": "Many countries involved in the Holocaust acknowledged their collective responsibility only after considerable delay: France did not begin to question its myth of heroic Resistance until the 1980s and 1990s."} +{"question": "In what was every incidental character identified?", "paragraph": "In \u201cLetters to V\u00e9ra\u201d every incidental character \u2014 including those whom even the memorious Nabokov might not have recalled years later, and whose years of birth and death he would hardly ever have known, and who played no role worth mention in even a voluminous biography \u2014 would be identified, if possible, and usually by Voronina. She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars, especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra. Credit where credit is due: The assiduity is Olga Voronina\u2019s much more than mine. BRIAN BOYD", "answer": "In \u201cLetters to V\u00e9ra\u201d", "sentence": "In \u201cLetters to V\u00e9ra\u201d every incidental character \u2014 including those whom even the memorious Nabokov might not have recalled years later, and whose years of birth and death he would hardly ever have known, and who played no role worth mention in even a voluminous biography \u2014 would be identified, if possible, and usually by Voronina.", "paragraph_sentence": " In \u201cLetters to V\u00e9ra\u201d every incidental character \u2014 including those whom even the memorious Nabokov might not have recalled years later, and whose years of birth and death he would hardly ever have known, and who played no role worth mention in even a voluminous biography \u2014 would be identified, if possible, and usually by Voronina. She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars, especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra. Credit where credit is due: The assiduity is Olga Voronina\u2019s much more than mine. BRIAN BOYD", "paragraph_answer": " In \u201cLetters to V\u00e9ra\u201d every incidental character \u2014 including those whom even the memorious Nabokov might not have recalled years later, and whose years of birth and death he would hardly ever have known, and who played no role worth mention in even a voluminous biography \u2014 would be identified, if possible, and usually by Voronina. She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars, especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra. Credit where credit is due: The assiduity is Olga Voronina\u2019s much more than mine. BRIAN BOYD", "sentence_answer": " In \u201cLetters to V\u00e9ra\u201d every incidental character \u2014 including those whom even the memorious Nabokov might not have recalled years later, and whose years of birth and death he would hardly ever have known, and who played no role worth mention in even a voluminous biography \u2014 would be identified, if possible, and usually by Voronina."} +{"question": "Who identified every incidental character?", "paragraph": "In \u201cLetters to V\u00e9ra\u201d every incidental character \u2014 including those whom even the memorious Nabokov might not have recalled years later, and whose years of birth and death he would hardly ever have known, and who played no role worth mention in even a voluminous biography \u2014 would be identified, if possible, and usually by Voronina. She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars, especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra. Credit where credit is due: The assiduity is Olga Voronina\u2019s much more than mine. BRIAN BOYD", "answer": "Voronina", "sentence": "In \u201cLetters to V\u00e9ra\u201d every incidental character \u2014 including those whom even the memorious Nabokov might not have recalled years later, and whose years of birth and death he would hardly ever have known, and who played no role worth mention in even a voluminous biography \u2014 would be identified, if possible, and usually by Voronina .", "paragraph_sentence": " In \u201cLetters to V\u00e9ra\u201d every incidental character \u2014 including those whom even the memorious Nabokov might not have recalled years later, and whose years of birth and death he would hardly ever have known, and who played no role worth mention in even a voluminous biography \u2014 would be identified, if possible, and usually by Voronina . She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars, especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra. Credit where credit is due: The assiduity is Olga Voronina\u2019s much more than mine. BRIAN BOYD", "paragraph_answer": "In \u201cLetters to V\u00e9ra\u201d every incidental character \u2014 including those whom even the memorious Nabokov might not have recalled years later, and whose years of birth and death he would hardly ever have known, and who played no role worth mention in even a voluminous biography \u2014 would be identified, if possible, and usually by Voronina . She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars, especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra. Credit where credit is due: The assiduity is Olga Voronina\u2019s much more than mine. BRIAN BOYD", "sentence_answer": "In \u201cLetters to V\u00e9ra\u201d every incidental character \u2014 including those whom even the memorious Nabokov might not have recalled years later, and whose years of birth and death he would hardly ever have known, and who played no role worth mention in even a voluminous biography \u2014 would be identified, if possible, and usually by Voronina ."} +{"question": "From whom did Voronina solicit aid from?", "paragraph": "In \u201cLetters to V\u00e9ra\u201d every incidental character \u2014 including those whom even the memorious Nabokov might not have recalled years later, and whose years of birth and death he would hardly ever have known, and who played no role worth mention in even a voluminous biography \u2014 would be identified, if possible, and usually by Voronina. She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars, especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra. Credit where credit is due: The assiduity is Olga Voronina\u2019s much more than mine. BRIAN BOYD", "answer": "Russian scholars", "sentence": "She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars , especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra.", "paragraph_sentence": "In \u201cLetters to V\u00e9ra\u201d every incidental character \u2014 including those whom even the memorious Nabokov might not have recalled years later, and whose years of birth and death he would hardly ever have known, and who played no role worth mention in even a voluminous biography \u2014 would be identified, if possible, and usually by Voronina. She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars , especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra. Credit where credit is due: The assiduity is Olga Voronina\u2019s much more than mine. BRIAN BOYD", "paragraph_answer": "In \u201cLetters to V\u00e9ra\u201d every incidental character \u2014 including those whom even the memorious Nabokov might not have recalled years later, and whose years of birth and death he would hardly ever have known, and who played no role worth mention in even a voluminous biography \u2014 would be identified, if possible, and usually by Voronina. She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars , especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra. Credit where credit is due: The assiduity is Olga Voronina\u2019s much more than mine. BRIAN BOYD", "sentence_answer": "She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars , especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra."} +{"question": "What is Gennady Barabtarlo known for?", "paragraph": "In \u201cLetters to V\u00e9ra\u201d every incidental character \u2014 including those whom even the memorious Nabokov might not have recalled years later, and whose years of birth and death he would hardly ever have known, and who played no role worth mention in even a voluminous biography \u2014 would be identified, if possible, and usually by Voronina. She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars, especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra. Credit where credit is due: The assiduity is Olga Voronina\u2019s much more than mine. BRIAN BOYD", "answer": "chess master and logodaedalist", "sentence": "She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars, especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra.", "paragraph_sentence": "In \u201cLetters to V\u00e9ra\u201d every incidental character \u2014 including those whom even the memorious Nabokov might not have recalled years later, and whose years of birth and death he would hardly ever have known, and who played no role worth mention in even a voluminous biography \u2014 would be identified, if possible, and usually by Voronina. She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars, especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra. Credit where credit is due: The assiduity is Olga Voronina\u2019s much more than mine. BRIAN BOYD", "paragraph_answer": "In \u201cLetters to V\u00e9ra\u201d every incidental character \u2014 including those whom even the memorious Nabokov might not have recalled years later, and whose years of birth and death he would hardly ever have known, and who played no role worth mention in even a voluminous biography \u2014 would be identified, if possible, and usually by Voronina. She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars, especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra. Credit where credit is due: The assiduity is Olga Voronina\u2019s much more than mine. BRIAN BOYD", "sentence_answer": "She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars, especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra."} +{"question": "What did Gennady Barabtarlo do?", "paragraph": "In \u201cLetters to V\u00e9ra\u201d every incidental character \u2014 including those whom even the memorious Nabokov might not have recalled years later, and whose years of birth and death he would hardly ever have known, and who played no role worth mention in even a voluminous biography \u2014 would be identified, if possible, and usually by Voronina. She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars, especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra. Credit where credit is due: The assiduity is Olga Voronina\u2019s much more than mine. BRIAN BOYD", "answer": "helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra", "sentence": "She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars, especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra .", "paragraph_sentence": "In \u201cLetters to V\u00e9ra\u201d every incidental character \u2014 including those whom even the memorious Nabokov might not have recalled years later, and whose years of birth and death he would hardly ever have known, and who played no role worth mention in even a voluminous biography \u2014 would be identified, if possible, and usually by Voronina. She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars, especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra . Credit where credit is due: The assiduity is Olga Voronina\u2019s much more than mine. BRIAN BOYD", "paragraph_answer": "In \u201cLetters to V\u00e9ra\u201d every incidental character \u2014 including those whom even the memorious Nabokov might not have recalled years later, and whose years of birth and death he would hardly ever have known, and who played no role worth mention in even a voluminous biography \u2014 would be identified, if possible, and usually by Voronina. She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars, especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra . Credit where credit is due: The assiduity is Olga Voronina\u2019s much more than mine. BRIAN BOYD", "sentence_answer": "She also solicited the aid of other Russian scholars, especially the chess master and logodaedalist Gennady Barabtarlo, who helped solve the riddles Vladimir posed for V\u00e9ra ."} +{"question": "In what city are Racines and Racines 2 located?", "paragraph": "To Dine: Three Racines Chefs Unite for One Dinner The Racines NY restaurant and wine bar that opened last year in TriBeCa, is actually the third in a group: the other two restaurants, Racines and Racines 2, are in Paris. Now chefs from all three restaurants, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Duca, Renaud Marcille and Alexandre Navarro, will cooperate on a dinner \u201cfor six hands\u201d in New York. The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream: Six Hands Dinner, $115, March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com.", "answer": "Paris", "sentence": "To Dine: Three Racines Chefs Unite for One Dinner The Racines NY restaurant and wine bar that opened last year in TriBeCa, is actually the third in a group: the other two restaurants, Racines and Racines 2, are in Paris .", "paragraph_sentence": " To Dine: Three Racines Chefs Unite for One Dinner The Racines NY restaurant and wine bar that opened last year in TriBeCa, is actually the third in a group: the other two restaurants, Racines and Racines 2, are in Paris . Now chefs from all three restaurants, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Duca, Renaud Marcille and Alexandre Navarro, will cooperate on a dinner \u201cfor six hands\u201d in New York. The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream: Six Hands Dinner, $115, March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com.", "paragraph_answer": "To Dine: Three Racines Chefs Unite for One Dinner The Racines NY restaurant and wine bar that opened last year in TriBeCa, is actually the third in a group: the other two restaurants, Racines and Racines 2, are in Paris . Now chefs from all three restaurants, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Duca, Renaud Marcille and Alexandre Navarro, will cooperate on a dinner \u201cfor six hands\u201d in New York. The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream: Six Hands Dinner, $115, March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com.", "sentence_answer": "To Dine: Three Racines Chefs Unite for One Dinner The Racines NY restaurant and wine bar that opened last year in TriBeCa, is actually the third in a group: the other two restaurants, Racines and Racines 2, are in Paris ."} +{"question": "In what state will the dinner \"for six hands\" take place?", "paragraph": "To Dine: Three Racines Chefs Unite for One Dinner The Racines NY restaurant and wine bar that opened last year in TriBeCa, is actually the third in a group: the other two restaurants, Racines and Racines 2, are in Paris. Now chefs from all three restaurants, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Duca, Renaud Marcille and Alexandre Navarro, will cooperate on a dinner \u201cfor six hands\u201d in New York. The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream: Six Hands Dinner, $115, March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com.", "answer": "New York", "sentence": "Now chefs from all three restaurants, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Duca, Renaud Marcille and Alexandre Navarro, will cooperate on a dinner \u201cfor six hands\u201d in New York .", "paragraph_sentence": "To Dine: Three Racines Chefs Unite for One Dinner The Racines NY restaurant and wine bar that opened last year in TriBeCa, is actually the third in a group: the other two restaurants, Racines and Racines 2, are in Paris. Now chefs from all three restaurants, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Duca, Renaud Marcille and Alexandre Navarro, will cooperate on a dinner \u201cfor six hands\u201d in New York . The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream: Six Hands Dinner, $115, March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com.", "paragraph_answer": "To Dine: Three Racines Chefs Unite for One Dinner The Racines NY restaurant and wine bar that opened last year in TriBeCa, is actually the third in a group: the other two restaurants, Racines and Racines 2, are in Paris. Now chefs from all three restaurants, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Duca, Renaud Marcille and Alexandre Navarro, will cooperate on a dinner \u201cfor six hands\u201d in New York . The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream: Six Hands Dinner, $115, March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com.", "sentence_answer": "Now chefs from all three restaurants, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Duca, Renaud Marcille and Alexandre Navarro, will cooperate on a dinner \u201cfor six hands\u201d in New York ."} +{"question": "On what street will the dinner \"for six hands\" take place?", "paragraph": "To Dine: Three Racines Chefs Unite for One Dinner The Racines NY restaurant and wine bar that opened last year in TriBeCa, is actually the third in a group: the other two restaurants, Racines and Racines 2, are in Paris. Now chefs from all three restaurants, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Duca, Renaud Marcille and Alexandre Navarro, will cooperate on a dinner \u201cfor six hands\u201d in New York. The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream: Six Hands Dinner, $115, March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com.", "answer": "Chambers Street", "sentence": "The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream: Six Hands Dinner, $115, March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com.", "paragraph_sentence": "To Dine: Three Racines Chefs Unite for One Dinner The Racines NY restaurant and wine bar that opened last year in TriBeCa, is actually the third in a group: the other two restaurants, Racines and Racines 2, are in Paris. Now chefs from all three restaurants, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Duca, Renaud Marcille and Alexandre Navarro, will cooperate on a dinner \u201cfor six hands\u201d in New York. The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream: Six Hands Dinner, $115, March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com. ", "paragraph_answer": "To Dine: Three Racines Chefs Unite for One Dinner The Racines NY restaurant and wine bar that opened last year in TriBeCa, is actually the third in a group: the other two restaurants, Racines and Racines 2, are in Paris. Now chefs from all three restaurants, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Duca, Renaud Marcille and Alexandre Navarro, will cooperate on a dinner \u201cfor six hands\u201d in New York. The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream: Six Hands Dinner, $115, March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com.", "sentence_answer": "The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream: Six Hands Dinner, $115, March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com."} +{"question": "How much will it cost to attend the dinner \"for six hands?\"", "paragraph": "To Dine: Three Racines Chefs Unite for One Dinner The Racines NY restaurant and wine bar that opened last year in TriBeCa, is actually the third in a group: the other two restaurants, Racines and Racines 2, are in Paris. Now chefs from all three restaurants, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Duca, Renaud Marcille and Alexandre Navarro, will cooperate on a dinner \u201cfor six hands\u201d in New York. The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream: Six Hands Dinner, $115, March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com.", "answer": "$115", "sentence": "The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream: Six Hands Dinner, $115 , March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com.", "paragraph_sentence": "To Dine: Three Racines Chefs Unite for One Dinner The Racines NY restaurant and wine bar that opened last year in TriBeCa, is actually the third in a group: the other two restaurants, Racines and Racines 2, are in Paris. Now chefs from all three restaurants, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Duca, Renaud Marcille and Alexandre Navarro, will cooperate on a dinner \u201cfor six hands\u201d in New York. The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream: Six Hands Dinner, $115 , March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com. ", "paragraph_answer": "To Dine: Three Racines Chefs Unite for One Dinner The Racines NY restaurant and wine bar that opened last year in TriBeCa, is actually the third in a group: the other two restaurants, Racines and Racines 2, are in Paris. Now chefs from all three restaurants, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Duca, Renaud Marcille and Alexandre Navarro, will cooperate on a dinner \u201cfor six hands\u201d in New York. The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream: Six Hands Dinner, $115 , March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com.", "sentence_answer": "The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream: Six Hands Dinner, $115 , March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com."} +{"question": "What dessert will be served at the dinner \"for six hands?\"", "paragraph": "To Dine: Three Racines Chefs Unite for One Dinner The Racines NY restaurant and wine bar that opened last year in TriBeCa, is actually the third in a group: the other two restaurants, Racines and Racines 2, are in Paris. Now chefs from all three restaurants, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Duca, Renaud Marcille and Alexandre Navarro, will cooperate on a dinner \u201cfor six hands\u201d in New York. The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream: Six Hands Dinner, $115, March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com.", "answer": "pineapple with coconut cream", "sentence": "The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream : Six Hands Dinner, $115, March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com.", "paragraph_sentence": "To Dine: Three Racines Chefs Unite for One Dinner The Racines NY restaurant and wine bar that opened last year in TriBeCa, is actually the third in a group: the other two restaurants, Racines and Racines 2, are in Paris. Now chefs from all three restaurants, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Duca, Renaud Marcille and Alexandre Navarro, will cooperate on a dinner \u201cfor six hands\u201d in New York. The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream : Six Hands Dinner, $115, March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com. ", "paragraph_answer": "To Dine: Three Racines Chefs Unite for One Dinner The Racines NY restaurant and wine bar that opened last year in TriBeCa, is actually the third in a group: the other two restaurants, Racines and Racines 2, are in Paris. Now chefs from all three restaurants, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Duca, Renaud Marcille and Alexandre Navarro, will cooperate on a dinner \u201cfor six hands\u201d in New York. The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream : Six Hands Dinner, $115, March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com.", "sentence_answer": "The meal will consist of eight courses, including lobster ravioli, beef with shaved winter roots, and pineapple with coconut cream : Six Hands Dinner, $115, March 26, Racines NY, 94 Chambers Street (Church Street), 212-227-3400, racinesny.com."} +{"question": "How many appeals for State Department correspondence has Citizens United made?", "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": "16", "sentence": "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_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": "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."} +{"question": "Where did the correspondence (if it exists) likely take place?", "paragraph": "Reports of Mrs. Clinton\u2019s use of only a private email account while she was secretary of state, meanwhile, have cast a new light on efforts by outside groups to obtain access to her correspondence with the Clinton Foundation during her tenure at the State Department \u2014 about donations or anything else. That correspondence, if it exists, would most likely have taken place on Mrs. Clinton\u2019s private email address, putting its accessibility \u2014 to journalists, scholars or political adversaries \u2014 in doubt. Already, Citizens United, a conservative advocacy group, has made 16 appeals under the Freedom of Information Act for State Department correspondence mostly related to Mrs. Clinton and foundation donors.", "answer": "Mrs. Clinton\u2019s private email address", "sentence": "That correspondence, if it exists, would most likely have taken place on Mrs. Clinton\u2019s private email address , putting its accessibility \u2014 to journalists, scholars or political adversaries \u2014 in doubt.", "paragraph_sentence": "Reports of Mrs. Clinton\u2019s use of only a private email account while she was secretary of state, meanwhile, have cast a new light on efforts by outside groups to obtain access to her correspondence with the Clinton Foundation during her tenure at the State Department \u2014 about donations or anything else. That correspondence, if it exists, would most likely have taken place on Mrs. Clinton\u2019s private email address , putting its accessibility \u2014 to journalists, scholars or political adversaries \u2014 in doubt. Already, Citizens United, a conservative advocacy group, has made 16 appeals under the Freedom of Information Act for State Department correspondence mostly related to Mrs. Clinton and foundation donors.", "paragraph_answer": "Reports of Mrs. Clinton\u2019s use of only a private email account while she was secretary of state, meanwhile, have cast a new light on efforts by outside groups to obtain access to her correspondence with the Clinton Foundation during her tenure at the State Department \u2014 about donations or anything else. That correspondence, if it exists, would most likely have taken place on Mrs. Clinton\u2019s private email address , putting its accessibility \u2014 to journalists, scholars or political adversaries \u2014 in doubt. Already, Citizens United, a conservative advocacy group, has made 16 appeals under the Freedom of Information Act for State Department correspondence mostly related to Mrs. Clinton and foundation donors.", "sentence_answer": "That correspondence, if it exists, would most likely have taken place on Mrs. Clinton\u2019s private email address , putting its accessibility \u2014 to journalists, scholars or political adversaries \u2014 in doubt."} +{"question": "What foundation was Mrs. Clinton corresponding with during her tenure at the State Department?", "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": "the Clinton Foundation", "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."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What was in doubt about Mrs. Clinton's private email address?", "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": "its accessibility", "sentence": "That correspondence, if it exists, would most likely have taken place on Mrs. Clinton\u2019s private email address, putting its accessibility \u2014 to journalists, scholars or political adversaries \u2014 in doubt.", "paragraph_sentence": "Reports of Mrs. Clinton\u2019s use of only a private email account while she was secretary of state, meanwhile, have cast a new light on efforts by outside groups to obtain access to her correspondence with the Clinton Foundation during her tenure at the State Department \u2014 about donations or anything else. That correspondence, if it exists, would most likely have taken place on Mrs. Clinton\u2019s private email address, putting its accessibility \u2014 to journalists, scholars or political adversaries \u2014 in doubt. Already, Citizens United, a conservative advocacy group, has made 16 appeals under the Freedom of Information Act for State Department correspondence mostly related to Mrs. Clinton and foundation donors.", "paragraph_answer": "Reports of Mrs. Clinton\u2019s use of only a private email account while she was secretary of state, meanwhile, have cast a new light on efforts by outside groups to obtain access to her correspondence with the Clinton Foundation during her tenure at the State Department \u2014 about donations or anything else. That correspondence, if it exists, would most likely have taken place on Mrs. Clinton\u2019s private email address, putting its accessibility \u2014 to journalists, scholars or political adversaries \u2014 in doubt. Already, Citizens United, a conservative advocacy group, has made 16 appeals under the Freedom of Information Act for State Department correspondence mostly related to Mrs. Clinton and foundation donors.", "sentence_answer": "That correspondence, if it exists, would most likely have taken place on Mrs. Clinton\u2019s private email address, putting its accessibility \u2014 to journalists, scholars or political adversaries \u2014 in doubt."} +{"question": "What did certain countries have poor records on that created an appearance problem for Mrs. Clinton?", "paragraph": "The donations from countries with poor records on women\u2019s rights, however, presented a difficult appearance problem for a candidate running in part as the embodiment of women\u2019s aspirations to equality. \u201cIt\u2019s a perfect example of the conflict of interest here,\u201d said Richard W. Painter, a White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush. \u201cThe United States has at least two issues that are very important with Saudi Arabia,\u201d he said. \u201cOne is continuing to fight terrorism, and the second is the rights of women.\u201d Mrs. Clinton\u2019s ramp-up to a candidacy built around women\u2019s issues continues in New York on Monday, when she and the philanthropist Melinda Gates unveil the \u201cNo Ceilings\u201d report. The next day, Mrs. Clinton will be the keynote speaker at a United Nations gathering on women\u2019s empowerment.", "answer": "women\u2019s rights", "sentence": "The donations from countries with poor records on women\u2019s rights , however, presented a difficult appearance problem for a candidate running in part as the embodiment of women\u2019s aspirations to equality.", "paragraph_sentence": " The donations from countries with poor records on women\u2019s rights , however, presented a difficult appearance problem for a candidate running in part as the embodiment of women\u2019s aspirations to equality. \u201cIt\u2019s a perfect example of the conflict of interest here,\u201d said Richard W. Painter, a White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush. \u201cThe United States has at least two issues that are very important with Saudi Arabia,\u201d he said. \u201cOne is continuing to fight terrorism, and the second is the rights of women.\u201d Mrs. Clinton\u2019s ramp-up to a candidacy built around women\u2019s issues continues in New York on Monday, when she and the philanthropist Melinda Gates unveil the \u201cNo Ceilings\u201d report. The next day, Mrs. Clinton will be the keynote speaker at a United Nations gathering on women\u2019s empowerment.", "paragraph_answer": "The donations from countries with poor records on women\u2019s rights , however, presented a difficult appearance problem for a candidate running in part as the embodiment of women\u2019s aspirations to equality. \u201cIt\u2019s a perfect example of the conflict of interest here,\u201d said Richard W. Painter, a White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush. \u201cThe United States has at least two issues that are very important with Saudi Arabia,\u201d he said. \u201cOne is continuing to fight terrorism, and the second is the rights of women.\u201d Mrs. Clinton\u2019s ramp-up to a candidacy built around women\u2019s issues continues in New York on Monday, when she and the philanthropist Melinda Gates unveil the \u201cNo Ceilings\u201d report. The next day, Mrs. Clinton will be the keynote speaker at a United Nations gathering on women\u2019s empowerment.", "sentence_answer": "The donations from countries with poor records on women\u2019s rights , however, presented a difficult appearance problem for a candidate running in part as the embodiment of women\u2019s aspirations to equality."} +{"question": "What women's aspiration does Mrs. Clinton embody with her candidacy?", "paragraph": "The donations from countries with poor records on women\u2019s rights, however, presented a difficult appearance problem for a candidate running in part as the embodiment of women\u2019s aspirations to equality. \u201cIt\u2019s a perfect example of the conflict of interest here,\u201d said Richard W. Painter, a White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush. \u201cThe United States has at least two issues that are very important with Saudi Arabia,\u201d he said. \u201cOne is continuing to fight terrorism, and the second is the rights of women.\u201d Mrs. Clinton\u2019s ramp-up to a candidacy built around women\u2019s issues continues in New York on Monday, when she and the philanthropist Melinda Gates unveil the \u201cNo Ceilings\u201d report. The next day, Mrs. Clinton will be the keynote speaker at a United Nations gathering on women\u2019s empowerment.", "answer": "equality", "sentence": "The donations from countries with poor records on women\u2019s rights, however, presented a difficult appearance problem for a candidate running in part as the embodiment of women\u2019s aspirations to equality .", "paragraph_sentence": " The donations from countries with poor records on women\u2019s rights, however, presented a difficult appearance problem for a candidate running in part as the embodiment of women\u2019s aspirations to equality . \u201cIt\u2019s a perfect example of the conflict of interest here,\u201d said Richard W. Painter, a White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush. \u201cThe United States has at least two issues that are very important with Saudi Arabia,\u201d he said. \u201cOne is continuing to fight terrorism, and the second is the rights of women.\u201d Mrs. Clinton\u2019s ramp-up to a candidacy built around women\u2019s issues continues in New York on Monday, when she and the philanthropist Melinda Gates unveil the \u201cNo Ceilings\u201d report. The next day, Mrs. Clinton will be the keynote speaker at a United Nations gathering on women\u2019s empowerment.", "paragraph_answer": "The donations from countries with poor records on women\u2019s rights, however, presented a difficult appearance problem for a candidate running in part as the embodiment of women\u2019s aspirations to equality . \u201cIt\u2019s a perfect example of the conflict of interest here,\u201d said Richard W. Painter, a White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush. \u201cThe United States has at least two issues that are very important with Saudi Arabia,\u201d he said. \u201cOne is continuing to fight terrorism, and the second is the rights of women.\u201d Mrs. Clinton\u2019s ramp-up to a candidacy built around women\u2019s issues continues in New York on Monday, when she and the philanthropist Melinda Gates unveil the \u201cNo Ceilings\u201d report. The next day, Mrs. Clinton will be the keynote speaker at a United Nations gathering on women\u2019s empowerment.", "sentence_answer": "The donations from countries with poor records on women\u2019s rights, however, presented a difficult appearance problem for a candidate running in part as the embodiment of women\u2019s aspirations to equality ."} +{"question": "Who was the White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush?", "paragraph": "The donations from countries with poor records on women\u2019s rights, however, presented a difficult appearance problem for a candidate running in part as the embodiment of women\u2019s aspirations to equality. \u201cIt\u2019s a perfect example of the conflict of interest here,\u201d said Richard W. Painter, a White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush. \u201cThe United States has at least two issues that are very important with Saudi Arabia,\u201d he said. \u201cOne is continuing to fight terrorism, and the second is the rights of women.\u201d Mrs. Clinton\u2019s ramp-up to a candidacy built around women\u2019s issues continues in New York on Monday, when she and the philanthropist Melinda Gates unveil the \u201cNo Ceilings\u201d report. The next day, Mrs. Clinton will be the keynote speaker at a United Nations gathering on women\u2019s empowerment.", "answer": "Richard W. Painter", "sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s a perfect example of the conflict of interest here,\u201d said Richard W. Painter , a White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush.", "paragraph_sentence": "The donations from countries with poor records on women\u2019s rights, however, presented a difficult appearance problem for a candidate running in part as the embodiment of women\u2019s aspirations to equality. \u201cIt\u2019s a perfect example of the conflict of interest here,\u201d said Richard W. Painter , a White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush. \u201cThe United States has at least two issues that are very important with Saudi Arabia,\u201d he said. \u201cOne is continuing to fight terrorism, and the second is the rights of women.\u201d Mrs. Clinton\u2019s ramp-up to a candidacy built around women\u2019s issues continues in New York on Monday, when she and the philanthropist Melinda Gates unveil the \u201cNo Ceilings\u201d report. The next day, Mrs. Clinton will be the keynote speaker at a United Nations gathering on women\u2019s empowerment.", "paragraph_answer": "The donations from countries with poor records on women\u2019s rights, however, presented a difficult appearance problem for a candidate running in part as the embodiment of women\u2019s aspirations to equality. \u201cIt\u2019s a perfect example of the conflict of interest here,\u201d said Richard W. Painter , a White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush. \u201cThe United States has at least two issues that are very important with Saudi Arabia,\u201d he said. \u201cOne is continuing to fight terrorism, and the second is the rights of women.\u201d Mrs. Clinton\u2019s ramp-up to a candidacy built around women\u2019s issues continues in New York on Monday, when she and the philanthropist Melinda Gates unveil the \u201cNo Ceilings\u201d report. The next day, Mrs. Clinton will be the keynote speaker at a United Nations gathering on women\u2019s empowerment.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s a perfect example of the conflict of interest here,\u201d said Richard W. Painter , a White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush."} +{"question": "Who will unveil the \"No Ceilings\" report with Mrs. Clinton?", "paragraph": "The donations from countries with poor records on women\u2019s rights, however, presented a difficult appearance problem for a candidate running in part as the embodiment of women\u2019s aspirations to equality. \u201cIt\u2019s a perfect example of the conflict of interest here,\u201d said Richard W. Painter, a White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush. \u201cThe United States has at least two issues that are very important with Saudi Arabia,\u201d he said. \u201cOne is continuing to fight terrorism, and the second is the rights of women.\u201d Mrs. Clinton\u2019s ramp-up to a candidacy built around women\u2019s issues continues in New York on Monday, when she and the philanthropist Melinda Gates unveil the \u201cNo Ceilings\u201d report. The next day, Mrs. Clinton will be the keynote speaker at a United Nations gathering on women\u2019s empowerment.", "answer": "Melinda Gates", "sentence": "Mrs. Clinton\u2019s ramp-up to a candidacy built around women\u2019s issues continues in New York on Monday, when she and the philanthropist Melinda Gates unveil the \u201cNo Ceilings\u201d report.", "paragraph_sentence": "The donations from countries with poor records on women\u2019s rights, however, presented a difficult appearance problem for a candidate running in part as the embodiment of women\u2019s aspirations to equality. \u201cIt\u2019s a perfect example of the conflict of interest here,\u201d said Richard W. Painter, a White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush. \u201cThe United States has at least two issues that are very important with Saudi Arabia,\u201d he said. \u201cOne is continuing to fight terrorism, and the second is the rights of women.\u201d Mrs. Clinton\u2019s ramp-up to a candidacy built around women\u2019s issues continues in New York on Monday, when she and the philanthropist Melinda Gates unveil the \u201cNo Ceilings\u201d report. The next day, Mrs. Clinton will be the keynote speaker at a United Nations gathering on women\u2019s empowerment.", "paragraph_answer": "The donations from countries with poor records on women\u2019s rights, however, presented a difficult appearance problem for a candidate running in part as the embodiment of women\u2019s aspirations to equality. \u201cIt\u2019s a perfect example of the conflict of interest here,\u201d said Richard W. Painter, a White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush. \u201cThe United States has at least two issues that are very important with Saudi Arabia,\u201d he said. \u201cOne is continuing to fight terrorism, and the second is the rights of women.\u201d Mrs. Clinton\u2019s ramp-up to a candidacy built around women\u2019s issues continues in New York on Monday, when she and the philanthropist Melinda Gates unveil the \u201cNo Ceilings\u201d report. The next day, Mrs. Clinton will be the keynote speaker at a United Nations gathering on women\u2019s empowerment.", "sentence_answer": "Mrs. Clinton\u2019s ramp-up to a candidacy built around women\u2019s issues continues in New York on Monday, when she and the philanthropist Melinda Gates unveil the \u201cNo Ceilings\u201d report."} +{"question": "What will be the topic at the United Nations gathering where Mrs. Clinton will be the keynote speaker?", "paragraph": "The donations from countries with poor records on women\u2019s rights, however, presented a difficult appearance problem for a candidate running in part as the embodiment of women\u2019s aspirations to equality. \u201cIt\u2019s a perfect example of the conflict of interest here,\u201d said Richard W. Painter, a White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush. \u201cThe United States has at least two issues that are very important with Saudi Arabia,\u201d he said. \u201cOne is continuing to fight terrorism, and the second is the rights of women.\u201d Mrs. Clinton\u2019s ramp-up to a candidacy built around women\u2019s issues continues in New York on Monday, when she and the philanthropist Melinda Gates unveil the \u201cNo Ceilings\u201d report. The next day, Mrs. Clinton will be the keynote speaker at a United Nations gathering on women\u2019s empowerment.", "answer": "women\u2019s empowerment", "sentence": "The next day, Mrs. Clinton will be the keynote speaker at a United Nations gathering on women\u2019s empowerment .", "paragraph_sentence": "The donations from countries with poor records on women\u2019s rights, however, presented a difficult appearance problem for a candidate running in part as the embodiment of women\u2019s aspirations to equality. \u201cIt\u2019s a perfect example of the conflict of interest here,\u201d said Richard W. Painter, a White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush. \u201cThe United States has at least two issues that are very important with Saudi Arabia,\u201d he said. \u201cOne is continuing to fight terrorism, and the second is the rights of women.\u201d Mrs. Clinton\u2019s ramp-up to a candidacy built around women\u2019s issues continues in New York on Monday, when she and the philanthropist Melinda Gates unveil the \u201cNo Ceilings\u201d report. The next day, Mrs. Clinton will be the keynote speaker at a United Nations gathering on women\u2019s empowerment . ", "paragraph_answer": "The donations from countries with poor records on women\u2019s rights, however, presented a difficult appearance problem for a candidate running in part as the embodiment of women\u2019s aspirations to equality. \u201cIt\u2019s a perfect example of the conflict of interest here,\u201d said Richard W. Painter, a White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush. \u201cThe United States has at least two issues that are very important with Saudi Arabia,\u201d he said. \u201cOne is continuing to fight terrorism, and the second is the rights of women.\u201d Mrs. Clinton\u2019s ramp-up to a candidacy built around women\u2019s issues continues in New York on Monday, when she and the philanthropist Melinda Gates unveil the \u201cNo Ceilings\u201d report. The next day, Mrs. Clinton will be the keynote speaker at a United Nations gathering on women\u2019s empowerment .", "sentence_answer": "The next day, Mrs. Clinton will be the keynote speaker at a United Nations gathering on women\u2019s empowerment ."} +{"question": "Did the persons parents live in the same house?", "paragraph": "And I grew up in these two different cultural households. My dad\u2019s household was all white, and my mother and my two older sisters are black. I\u2019m the only one who\u2019s biracial. So I found myself always being a bridge in terms of culture and different classes. In my home in the city, we were poor. My dad\u2019s household was working-class, but there was always food on the table. Growing up with those two very distinct experiences started to form my relationship with the world and with people in different communities, and seeing both differences and similarities.", "answer": "two different cultural households", "sentence": "And I grew up in these two different cultural households .", "paragraph_sentence": " And I grew up in these two different cultural households . My dad\u2019s household was all white, and my mother and my two older sisters are black. I\u2019m the only one who\u2019s biracial. So I found myself always being a bridge in terms of culture and different classes. In my home in the city, we were poor. My dad\u2019s household was working-class, but there was always food on the table. Growing up with those two very distinct experiences started to form my relationship with the world and with people in different communities, and seeing both differences and similarities.", "paragraph_answer": "And I grew up in these two different cultural households . My dad\u2019s household was all white, and my mother and my two older sisters are black. I\u2019m the only one who\u2019s biracial. So I found myself always being a bridge in terms of culture and different classes. In my home in the city, we were poor. My dad\u2019s household was working-class, but there was always food on the table. Growing up with those two very distinct experiences started to form my relationship with the world and with people in different communities, and seeing both differences and similarities.", "sentence_answer": "And I grew up in these two different cultural households ."} +{"question": "What was notable of the person's parent's houses?", "paragraph": "And I grew up in these two different cultural households. My dad\u2019s household was all white, and my mother and my two older sisters are black. I\u2019m the only one who\u2019s biracial. So I found myself always being a bridge in terms of culture and different classes. In my home in the city, we were poor. My dad\u2019s household was working-class, but there was always food on the table. Growing up with those two very distinct experiences started to form my relationship with the world and with people in different communities, and seeing both differences and similarities.", "answer": "My dad\u2019s household was all white, and my mother and my two older sisters are black.", "sentence": "My dad\u2019s household was all white, and my mother and my two older sisters are black. I\u2019m the only one who\u2019s biracial.", "paragraph_sentence": "And I grew up in these two different cultural households. My dad\u2019s household was all white, and my mother and my two older sisters are black. I\u2019m the only one who\u2019s biracial. So I found myself always being a bridge in terms of culture and different classes. In my home in the city, we were poor. My dad\u2019s household was working-class, but there was always food on the table. Growing up with those two very distinct experiences started to form my relationship with the world and with people in different communities, and seeing both differences and similarities.", "paragraph_answer": "And I grew up in these two different cultural households. My dad\u2019s household was all white, and my mother and my two older sisters are black. I\u2019m the only one who\u2019s biracial. So I found myself always being a bridge in terms of culture and different classes. In my home in the city, we were poor. My dad\u2019s household was working-class, but there was always food on the table. Growing up with those two very distinct experiences started to form my relationship with the world and with people in different communities, and seeing both differences and similarities.", "sentence_answer": " My dad\u2019s household was all white, and my mother and my two older sisters are black. I\u2019m the only one who\u2019s biracial."} +{"question": "Was the persons father rich?", "paragraph": "And I grew up in these two different cultural households. My dad\u2019s household was all white, and my mother and my two older sisters are black. I\u2019m the only one who\u2019s biracial. So I found myself always being a bridge in terms of culture and different classes. In my home in the city, we were poor. My dad\u2019s household was working-class, but there was always food on the table. Growing up with those two very distinct experiences started to form my relationship with the world and with people in different communities, and seeing both differences and similarities.", "answer": "working-class", "sentence": "My dad\u2019s household was working-class , but there was always food on the table.", "paragraph_sentence": "And I grew up in these two different cultural households. My dad\u2019s household was all white, and my mother and my two older sisters are black. I\u2019m the only one who\u2019s biracial. So I found myself always being a bridge in terms of culture and different classes. In my home in the city, we were poor. My dad\u2019s household was working-class , but there was always food on the table. Growing up with those two very distinct experiences started to form my relationship with the world and with people in different communities, and seeing both differences and similarities.", "paragraph_answer": "And I grew up in these two different cultural households. My dad\u2019s household was all white, and my mother and my two older sisters are black. I\u2019m the only one who\u2019s biracial. So I found myself always being a bridge in terms of culture and different classes. In my home in the city, we were poor. My dad\u2019s household was working-class , but there was always food on the table. Growing up with those two very distinct experiences started to form my relationship with the world and with people in different communities, and seeing both differences and similarities.", "sentence_answer": "My dad\u2019s household was working-class , but there was always food on the table."} +{"question": "What was the persons ethnicity?", "paragraph": "And I grew up in these two different cultural households. My dad\u2019s household was all white, and my mother and my two older sisters are black. I\u2019m the only one who\u2019s biracial. So I found myself always being a bridge in terms of culture and different classes. In my home in the city, we were poor. My dad\u2019s household was working-class, but there was always food on the table. Growing up with those two very distinct experiences started to form my relationship with the world and with people in different communities, and seeing both differences and similarities.", "answer": "biracial", "sentence": "I\u2019m the only one who\u2019s biracial .", "paragraph_sentence": "And I grew up in these two different cultural households. My dad\u2019s household was all white, and my mother and my two older sisters are black. I\u2019m the only one who\u2019s biracial . So I found myself always being a bridge in terms of culture and different classes. In my home in the city, we were poor. My dad\u2019s household was working-class, but there was always food on the table. Growing up with those two very distinct experiences started to form my relationship with the world and with people in different communities, and seeing both differences and similarities.", "paragraph_answer": "And I grew up in these two different cultural households. My dad\u2019s household was all white, and my mother and my two older sisters are black. I\u2019m the only one who\u2019s biracial . So I found myself always being a bridge in terms of culture and different classes. In my home in the city, we were poor. My dad\u2019s household was working-class, but there was always food on the table. Growing up with those two very distinct experiences started to form my relationship with the world and with people in different communities, and seeing both differences and similarities.", "sentence_answer": "I\u2019m the only one who\u2019s biracial ."} +{"question": "Did the person start an organization before junior high?", "paragraph": "It was with my classmates. Someone had been stealing from the cubbies in our classroom, and so I organized a couple of my classmates and we started the Star Detective Group. And I got my teacher to sign off on this group to make it legit, and we then investigated. When I got to junior high, I organized a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war. But I also got it endorsed by the teachers, because I was never too much of a rebel. I also learned resilience from my mother. The confidence that you have to have as a survival skill \u2014 I saw that in her and learned that from her. You have to feel that your voice matters and that you can drive change and impact change, because if you feel like you can\u2019t, then you won\u2019t.", "answer": "Star Detective Group", "sentence": "Someone had been stealing from the cubbies in our classroom, and so I organized a couple of my classmates and we started the Star Detective Group .", "paragraph_sentence": "It was with my classmates. Someone had been stealing from the cubbies in our classroom, and so I organized a couple of my classmates and we started the Star Detective Group . And I got my teacher to sign off on this group to make it legit, and we then investigated. When I got to junior high, I organized a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war. But I also got it endorsed by the teachers, because I was never too much of a rebel. I also learned resilience from my mother. The confidence that you have to have as a survival skill \u2014 I saw that in her and learned that from her. You have to feel that your voice matters and that you can drive change and impact change, because if you feel like you can\u2019t, then you won\u2019t.", "paragraph_answer": "It was with my classmates. Someone had been stealing from the cubbies in our classroom, and so I organized a couple of my classmates and we started the Star Detective Group . And I got my teacher to sign off on this group to make it legit, and we then investigated. When I got to junior high, I organized a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war. But I also got it endorsed by the teachers, because I was never too much of a rebel. I also learned resilience from my mother. The confidence that you have to have as a survival skill \u2014 I saw that in her and learned that from her. You have to feel that your voice matters and that you can drive change and impact change, because if you feel like you can\u2019t, then you won\u2019t.", "sentence_answer": "Someone had been stealing from the cubbies in our classroom, and so I organized a couple of my classmates and we started the Star Detective Group ."} +{"question": "What did the person start in junior high?", "paragraph": "It was with my classmates. Someone had been stealing from the cubbies in our classroom, and so I organized a couple of my classmates and we started the Star Detective Group. And I got my teacher to sign off on this group to make it legit, and we then investigated. When I got to junior high, I organized a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war. But I also got it endorsed by the teachers, because I was never too much of a rebel. I also learned resilience from my mother. The confidence that you have to have as a survival skill \u2014 I saw that in her and learned that from her. You have to feel that your voice matters and that you can drive change and impact change, because if you feel like you can\u2019t, then you won\u2019t.", "answer": "a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war", "sentence": "When I got to junior high, I organized a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war .", "paragraph_sentence": "It was with my classmates. Someone had been stealing from the cubbies in our classroom, and so I organized a couple of my classmates and we started the Star Detective Group. And I got my teacher to sign off on this group to make it legit, and we then investigated. When I got to junior high, I organized a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war . But I also got it endorsed by the teachers, because I was never too much of a rebel. I also learned resilience from my mother. The confidence that you have to have as a survival skill \u2014 I saw that in her and learned that from her. You have to feel that your voice matters and that you can drive change and impact change, because if you feel like you can\u2019t, then you won\u2019t.", "paragraph_answer": "It was with my classmates. Someone had been stealing from the cubbies in our classroom, and so I organized a couple of my classmates and we started the Star Detective Group. And I got my teacher to sign off on this group to make it legit, and we then investigated. When I got to junior high, I organized a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war . But I also got it endorsed by the teachers, because I was never too much of a rebel. I also learned resilience from my mother. The confidence that you have to have as a survival skill \u2014 I saw that in her and learned that from her. You have to feel that your voice matters and that you can drive change and impact change, because if you feel like you can\u2019t, then you won\u2019t.", "sentence_answer": "When I got to junior high, I organized a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war ."} +{"question": "Did the person follow the rules?", "paragraph": "It was with my classmates. Someone had been stealing from the cubbies in our classroom, and so I organized a couple of my classmates and we started the Star Detective Group. And I got my teacher to sign off on this group to make it legit, and we then investigated. When I got to junior high, I organized a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war. But I also got it endorsed by the teachers, because I was never too much of a rebel. I also learned resilience from my mother. The confidence that you have to have as a survival skill \u2014 I saw that in her and learned that from her. You have to feel that your voice matters and that you can drive change and impact change, because if you feel like you can\u2019t, then you won\u2019t.", "answer": "I was never too much of a rebel", "sentence": "But I also got it endorsed by the teachers, because I was never too much of a rebel .", "paragraph_sentence": "It was with my classmates. Someone had been stealing from the cubbies in our classroom, and so I organized a couple of my classmates and we started the Star Detective Group. And I got my teacher to sign off on this group to make it legit, and we then investigated. When I got to junior high, I organized a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war. But I also got it endorsed by the teachers, because I was never too much of a rebel . I also learned resilience from my mother. The confidence that you have to have as a survival skill \u2014 I saw that in her and learned that from her. You have to feel that your voice matters and that you can drive change and impact change, because if you feel like you can\u2019t, then you won\u2019t.", "paragraph_answer": "It was with my classmates. Someone had been stealing from the cubbies in our classroom, and so I organized a couple of my classmates and we started the Star Detective Group. And I got my teacher to sign off on this group to make it legit, and we then investigated. When I got to junior high, I organized a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war. But I also got it endorsed by the teachers, because I was never too much of a rebel . I also learned resilience from my mother. The confidence that you have to have as a survival skill \u2014 I saw that in her and learned that from her. You have to feel that your voice matters and that you can drive change and impact change, because if you feel like you can\u2019t, then you won\u2019t.", "sentence_answer": "But I also got it endorsed by the teachers, because I was never too much of a rebel ."} +{"question": "Where did the person grasp the idea of resilience?", "paragraph": "It was with my classmates. Someone had been stealing from the cubbies in our classroom, and so I organized a couple of my classmates and we started the Star Detective Group. And I got my teacher to sign off on this group to make it legit, and we then investigated. When I got to junior high, I organized a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war. But I also got it endorsed by the teachers, because I was never too much of a rebel. I also learned resilience from my mother. The confidence that you have to have as a survival skill \u2014 I saw that in her and learned that from her. You have to feel that your voice matters and that you can drive change and impact change, because if you feel like you can\u2019t, then you won\u2019t.", "answer": "mother", "sentence": "I also learned resilience from my mother .", "paragraph_sentence": "It was with my classmates. Someone had been stealing from the cubbies in our classroom, and so I organized a couple of my classmates and we started the Star Detective Group. And I got my teacher to sign off on this group to make it legit, and we then investigated. When I got to junior high, I organized a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war. But I also got it endorsed by the teachers, because I was never too much of a rebel. I also learned resilience from my mother . The confidence that you have to have as a survival skill \u2014 I saw that in her and learned that from her. You have to feel that your voice matters and that you can drive change and impact change, because if you feel like you can\u2019t, then you won\u2019t.", "paragraph_answer": "It was with my classmates. Someone had been stealing from the cubbies in our classroom, and so I organized a couple of my classmates and we started the Star Detective Group. And I got my teacher to sign off on this group to make it legit, and we then investigated. When I got to junior high, I organized a walkout from the school to protest the first Iraq war. But I also got it endorsed by the teachers, because I was never too much of a rebel. I also learned resilience from my mother . The confidence that you have to have as a survival skill \u2014 I saw that in her and learned that from her. You have to feel that your voice matters and that you can drive change and impact change, because if you feel like you can\u2019t, then you won\u2019t.", "sentence_answer": "I also learned resilience from my mother ."} +{"question": "What does the person advocate that leaders cannot be?", "paragraph": "To be an effective leader, you can\u2019t be conflict-averse. So many people are conflict-averse. That\u2019s been my biggest surprise in business. I wasn\u2019t expecting how many people in leadership positions and in very senior managerial positions are averse to conflict. I don\u2019t think you can push something forward if you don\u2019t have that skill. And is that something that\u2019s always been natural for you? It has, and maybe it\u2019s because I grew up with so many different opinions and perspectives. I had to be able to address differences very early on as I moved through my life. It\u2019s a skill set I had naturally, but I\u2019ve also developed it over time. It\u2019s about being direct and honest but constructive, and calling out the elephants in the room. Let\u2019s talk about it and find a way forward.", "answer": "you can\u2019t be conflict-averse", "sentence": "To be an effective leader, you can\u2019t be conflict-averse .", "paragraph_sentence": " To be an effective leader, you can\u2019t be conflict-averse . So many people are conflict-averse. That\u2019s been my biggest surprise in business. I wasn\u2019t expecting how many people in leadership positions and in very senior managerial positions are averse to conflict. I don\u2019t think you can push something forward if you don\u2019t have that skill. And is that something that\u2019s always been natural for you? It has, and maybe it\u2019s because I grew up with so many different opinions and perspectives. I had to be able to address differences very early on as I moved through my life. It\u2019s a skill set I had naturally, but I\u2019ve also developed it over time. It\u2019s about being direct and honest but constructive, and calling out the elephants in the room. Let\u2019s talk about it and find a way forward.", "paragraph_answer": "To be an effective leader, you can\u2019t be conflict-averse . So many people are conflict-averse. That\u2019s been my biggest surprise in business. I wasn\u2019t expecting how many people in leadership positions and in very senior managerial positions are averse to conflict. I don\u2019t think you can push something forward if you don\u2019t have that skill. And is that something that\u2019s always been natural for you? It has, and maybe it\u2019s because I grew up with so many different opinions and perspectives. I had to be able to address differences very early on as I moved through my life. It\u2019s a skill set I had naturally, but I\u2019ve also developed it over time. It\u2019s about being direct and honest but constructive, and calling out the elephants in the room. Let\u2019s talk about it and find a way forward.", "sentence_answer": "To be an effective leader, you can\u2019t be conflict-averse ."} +{"question": "In what area was the person suprised most by its leaders?", "paragraph": "To be an effective leader, you can\u2019t be conflict-averse. So many people are conflict-averse. That\u2019s been my biggest surprise in business. I wasn\u2019t expecting how many people in leadership positions and in very senior managerial positions are averse to conflict. I don\u2019t think you can push something forward if you don\u2019t have that skill. And is that something that\u2019s always been natural for you? It has, and maybe it\u2019s because I grew up with so many different opinions and perspectives. I had to be able to address differences very early on as I moved through my life. It\u2019s a skill set I had naturally, but I\u2019ve also developed it over time. It\u2019s about being direct and honest but constructive, and calling out the elephants in the room. Let\u2019s talk about it and find a way forward.", "answer": "business", "sentence": "That\u2019s been my biggest surprise in business .", "paragraph_sentence": "To be an effective leader, you can\u2019t be conflict-averse. So many people are conflict-averse. That\u2019s been my biggest surprise in business . I wasn\u2019t expecting how many people in leadership positions and in very senior managerial positions are averse to conflict. I don\u2019t think you can push something forward if you don\u2019t have that skill. And is that something that\u2019s always been natural for you? It has, and maybe it\u2019s because I grew up with so many different opinions and perspectives. I had to be able to address differences very early on as I moved through my life. It\u2019s a skill set I had naturally, but I\u2019ve also developed it over time. It\u2019s about being direct and honest but constructive, and calling out the elephants in the room. Let\u2019s talk about it and find a way forward.", "paragraph_answer": "To be an effective leader, you can\u2019t be conflict-averse. So many people are conflict-averse. That\u2019s been my biggest surprise in business . I wasn\u2019t expecting how many people in leadership positions and in very senior managerial positions are averse to conflict. I don\u2019t think you can push something forward if you don\u2019t have that skill. And is that something that\u2019s always been natural for you? It has, and maybe it\u2019s because I grew up with so many different opinions and perspectives. I had to be able to address differences very early on as I moved through my life. It\u2019s a skill set I had naturally, but I\u2019ve also developed it over time. It\u2019s about being direct and honest but constructive, and calling out the elephants in the room. Let\u2019s talk about it and find a way forward.", "sentence_answer": "That\u2019s been my biggest surprise in business ."} +{"question": "What does the person advocate in relation to conflicts?", "paragraph": "To be an effective leader, you can\u2019t be conflict-averse. So many people are conflict-averse. That\u2019s been my biggest surprise in business. I wasn\u2019t expecting how many people in leadership positions and in very senior managerial positions are averse to conflict. I don\u2019t think you can push something forward if you don\u2019t have that skill. And is that something that\u2019s always been natural for you? It has, and maybe it\u2019s because I grew up with so many different opinions and perspectives. I had to be able to address differences very early on as I moved through my life. It\u2019s a skill set I had naturally, but I\u2019ve also developed it over time. It\u2019s about being direct and honest but constructive, and calling out the elephants in the room. Let\u2019s talk about it and find a way forward.", "answer": "It\u2019s about being direct and honest but constructive, and calling out the elephants in the room. Let\u2019s talk about it and find a way forward.", "sentence": "It\u2019s about being direct and honest but constructive, and calling out the elephants in the room. Let\u2019s talk about it and find a way forward.", "paragraph_sentence": "To be an effective leader, you can\u2019t be conflict-averse. So many people are conflict-averse. That\u2019s been my biggest surprise in business. I wasn\u2019t expecting how many people in leadership positions and in very senior managerial positions are averse to conflict. I don\u2019t think you can push something forward if you don\u2019t have that skill. And is that something that\u2019s always been natural for you? It has, and maybe it\u2019s because I grew up with so many different opinions and perspectives. I had to be able to address differences very early on as I moved through my life. It\u2019s a skill set I had naturally, but I\u2019ve also developed it over time. It\u2019s about being direct and honest but constructive, and calling out the elephants in the room. Let\u2019s talk about it and find a way forward. ", "paragraph_answer": "To be an effective leader, you can\u2019t be conflict-averse. So many people are conflict-averse. That\u2019s been my biggest surprise in business. I wasn\u2019t expecting how many people in leadership positions and in very senior managerial positions are averse to conflict. I don\u2019t think you can push something forward if you don\u2019t have that skill. And is that something that\u2019s always been natural for you? It has, and maybe it\u2019s because I grew up with so many different opinions and perspectives. I had to be able to address differences very early on as I moved through my life. It\u2019s a skill set I had naturally, but I\u2019ve also developed it over time. It\u2019s about being direct and honest but constructive, and calling out the elephants in the room. Let\u2019s talk about it and find a way forward. ", "sentence_answer": " It\u2019s about being direct and honest but constructive, and calling out the elephants in the room. Let\u2019s talk about it and find a way forward. "} +{"question": "In what business areas did the person find the issues with conflict?", "paragraph": "To be an effective leader, you can\u2019t be conflict-averse. So many people are conflict-averse. That\u2019s been my biggest surprise in business. I wasn\u2019t expecting how many people in leadership positions and in very senior managerial positions are averse to conflict. I don\u2019t think you can push something forward if you don\u2019t have that skill. And is that something that\u2019s always been natural for you? It has, and maybe it\u2019s because I grew up with so many different opinions and perspectives. I had to be able to address differences very early on as I moved through my life. It\u2019s a skill set I had naturally, but I\u2019ve also developed it over time. It\u2019s about being direct and honest but constructive, and calling out the elephants in the room. Let\u2019s talk about it and find a way forward.", "answer": "leadership positions and in very senior managerial positions", "sentence": "I wasn\u2019t expecting how many people in leadership positions and in very senior managerial positions are averse to conflict.", "paragraph_sentence": "To be an effective leader, you can\u2019t be conflict-averse. So many people are conflict-averse. That\u2019s been my biggest surprise in business. I wasn\u2019t expecting how many people in leadership positions and in very senior managerial positions are averse to conflict. I don\u2019t think you can push something forward if you don\u2019t have that skill. And is that something that\u2019s always been natural for you? It has, and maybe it\u2019s because I grew up with so many different opinions and perspectives. I had to be able to address differences very early on as I moved through my life. It\u2019s a skill set I had naturally, but I\u2019ve also developed it over time. It\u2019s about being direct and honest but constructive, and calling out the elephants in the room. Let\u2019s talk about it and find a way forward.", "paragraph_answer": "To be an effective leader, you can\u2019t be conflict-averse. So many people are conflict-averse. That\u2019s been my biggest surprise in business. I wasn\u2019t expecting how many people in leadership positions and in very senior managerial positions are averse to conflict. I don\u2019t think you can push something forward if you don\u2019t have that skill. And is that something that\u2019s always been natural for you? It has, and maybe it\u2019s because I grew up with so many different opinions and perspectives. I had to be able to address differences very early on as I moved through my life. It\u2019s a skill set I had naturally, but I\u2019ve also developed it over time. It\u2019s about being direct and honest but constructive, and calling out the elephants in the room. Let\u2019s talk about it and find a way forward.", "sentence_answer": "I wasn\u2019t expecting how many people in leadership positions and in very senior managerial positions are averse to conflict."} +{"question": "How does this person start a conversation?", "paragraph": "I typically just start off asking a little bit about how they spent their weekend or something that helps me understand them as a person. From a professional standpoint, I\u2019m looking for people who are curious but who also have a point of view, and so I\u2019ll often ask questions to see if people will give me a specific point of view on an issue, usually within our field. It\u2019s interesting how some people don\u2019t want to do that. They want to kind of hedge their bets. They\u2019re afraid to be wrong, and I don\u2019t want people to be afraid to be wrong. I\u2019m looking for people who are confident enough yet also open enough to have a point of view, but also open to talking about it and maybe changing their mind. I want to see someone who\u2019s constantly thinking and asking questions and wanting to learn more.", "answer": "I typically just start off asking a little bit about how they spent their weekend or something that helps me understand them as a person.", "sentence": "I typically just start off asking a little bit about how they spent their weekend or something that helps me understand them as a person. From a professional standpoint, I\u2019m looking for people who are curious but who also have a point of view, and so I\u2019ll often ask questions to see if people will give me a specific point of view on an issue, usually within our field.", "paragraph_sentence": " I typically just start off asking a little bit about how they spent their weekend or something that helps me understand them as a person. From a professional standpoint, I\u2019m looking for people who are curious but who also have a point of view, and so I\u2019ll often ask questions to see if people will give me a specific point of view on an issue, usually within our field. It\u2019s interesting how some people don\u2019t want to do that. They want to kind of hedge their bets. They\u2019re afraid to be wrong, and I don\u2019t want people to be afraid to be wrong. I\u2019m looking for people who are confident enough yet also open enough to have a point of view, but also open to talking about it and maybe changing their mind. I want to see someone who\u2019s constantly thinking and asking questions and wanting to learn more.", "paragraph_answer": " I typically just start off asking a little bit about how they spent their weekend or something that helps me understand them as a person. From a professional standpoint, I\u2019m looking for people who are curious but who also have a point of view, and so I\u2019ll often ask questions to see if people will give me a specific point of view on an issue, usually within our field. It\u2019s interesting how some people don\u2019t want to do that. They want to kind of hedge their bets. They\u2019re afraid to be wrong, and I don\u2019t want people to be afraid to be wrong. I\u2019m looking for people who are confident enough yet also open enough to have a point of view, but also open to talking about it and maybe changing their mind. I want to see someone who\u2019s constantly thinking and asking questions and wanting to learn more.", "sentence_answer": " I typically just start off asking a little bit about how they spent their weekend or something that helps me understand them as a person. From a professional standpoint, I\u2019m looking for people who are curious but who also have a point of view, and so I\u2019ll often ask questions to see if people will give me a specific point of view on an issue, usually within our field."} +{"question": "What does this person dislike about peoples motivations behind their answers?", "paragraph": "I typically just start off asking a little bit about how they spent their weekend or something that helps me understand them as a person. From a professional standpoint, I\u2019m looking for people who are curious but who also have a point of view, and so I\u2019ll often ask questions to see if people will give me a specific point of view on an issue, usually within our field. It\u2019s interesting how some people don\u2019t want to do that. They want to kind of hedge their bets. They\u2019re afraid to be wrong, and I don\u2019t want people to be afraid to be wrong. I\u2019m looking for people who are confident enough yet also open enough to have a point of view, but also open to talking about it and maybe changing their mind. I want to see someone who\u2019s constantly thinking and asking questions and wanting to learn more.", "answer": "They\u2019re afraid to be wrong", "sentence": "They\u2019re afraid to be wrong , and I don\u2019t want people to be afraid to be wrong.", "paragraph_sentence": "I typically just start off asking a little bit about how they spent their weekend or something that helps me understand them as a person. From a professional standpoint, I\u2019m looking for people who are curious but who also have a point of view, and so I\u2019ll often ask questions to see if people will give me a specific point of view on an issue, usually within our field. It\u2019s interesting how some people don\u2019t want to do that. They want to kind of hedge their bets. They\u2019re afraid to be wrong , and I don\u2019t want people to be afraid to be wrong. I\u2019m looking for people who are confident enough yet also open enough to have a point of view, but also open to talking about it and maybe changing their mind. I want to see someone who\u2019s constantly thinking and asking questions and wanting to learn more.", "paragraph_answer": "I typically just start off asking a little bit about how they spent their weekend or something that helps me understand them as a person. From a professional standpoint, I\u2019m looking for people who are curious but who also have a point of view, and so I\u2019ll often ask questions to see if people will give me a specific point of view on an issue, usually within our field. It\u2019s interesting how some people don\u2019t want to do that. They want to kind of hedge their bets. They\u2019re afraid to be wrong , and I don\u2019t want people to be afraid to be wrong. I\u2019m looking for people who are confident enough yet also open enough to have a point of view, but also open to talking about it and maybe changing their mind. I want to see someone who\u2019s constantly thinking and asking questions and wanting to learn more.", "sentence_answer": " They\u2019re afraid to be wrong , and I don\u2019t want people to be afraid to be wrong."} +{"question": "What does this person want in an employee?", "paragraph": "I typically just start off asking a little bit about how they spent their weekend or something that helps me understand them as a person. From a professional standpoint, I\u2019m looking for people who are curious but who also have a point of view, and so I\u2019ll often ask questions to see if people will give me a specific point of view on an issue, usually within our field. It\u2019s interesting how some people don\u2019t want to do that. They want to kind of hedge their bets. They\u2019re afraid to be wrong, and I don\u2019t want people to be afraid to be wrong. I\u2019m looking for people who are confident enough yet also open enough to have a point of view, but also open to talking about it and maybe changing their mind. I want to see someone who\u2019s constantly thinking and asking questions and wanting to learn more.", "answer": "From a professional standpoint, I\u2019m looking for people who are curious but who also have a point of view", "sentence": "From a professional standpoint, I\u2019m looking for people who are curious but who also have a point of view , and so I\u2019ll often ask questions to see if people will give me a specific point of view on an issue, usually within our field.", "paragraph_sentence": "I typically just start off asking a little bit about how they spent their weekend or something that helps me understand them as a person. From a professional standpoint, I\u2019m looking for people who are curious but who also have a point of view , and so I\u2019ll often ask questions to see if people will give me a specific point of view on an issue, usually within our field. It\u2019s interesting how some people don\u2019t want to do that. They want to kind of hedge their bets. They\u2019re afraid to be wrong, and I don\u2019t want people to be afraid to be wrong. I\u2019m looking for people who are confident enough yet also open enough to have a point of view, but also open to talking about it and maybe changing their mind. I want to see someone who\u2019s constantly thinking and asking questions and wanting to learn more.", "paragraph_answer": "I typically just start off asking a little bit about how they spent their weekend or something that helps me understand them as a person. From a professional standpoint, I\u2019m looking for people who are curious but who also have a point of view , and so I\u2019ll often ask questions to see if people will give me a specific point of view on an issue, usually within our field. It\u2019s interesting how some people don\u2019t want to do that. They want to kind of hedge their bets. They\u2019re afraid to be wrong, and I don\u2019t want people to be afraid to be wrong. I\u2019m looking for people who are confident enough yet also open enough to have a point of view, but also open to talking about it and maybe changing their mind. I want to see someone who\u2019s constantly thinking and asking questions and wanting to learn more.", "sentence_answer": " From a professional standpoint, I\u2019m looking for people who are curious but who also have a point of view , and so I\u2019ll often ask questions to see if people will give me a specific point of view on an issue, usually within our field."} +{"question": "Does this person prefer critical thinking in applicants?", "paragraph": "I typically just start off asking a little bit about how they spent their weekend or something that helps me understand them as a person. From a professional standpoint, I\u2019m looking for people who are curious but who also have a point of view, and so I\u2019ll often ask questions to see if people will give me a specific point of view on an issue, usually within our field. It\u2019s interesting how some people don\u2019t want to do that. They want to kind of hedge their bets. They\u2019re afraid to be wrong, and I don\u2019t want people to be afraid to be wrong. I\u2019m looking for people who are confident enough yet also open enough to have a point of view, but also open to talking about it and maybe changing their mind. I want to see someone who\u2019s constantly thinking and asking questions and wanting to learn more.", "answer": "I want to see someone who\u2019s constantly thinking and asking questions and wanting to learn more.", "sentence": "I want to see someone who\u2019s constantly thinking and asking questions and wanting to learn more.", "paragraph_sentence": "I typically just start off asking a little bit about how they spent their weekend or something that helps me understand them as a person. From a professional standpoint, I\u2019m looking for people who are curious but who also have a point of view, and so I\u2019ll often ask questions to see if people will give me a specific point of view on an issue, usually within our field. It\u2019s interesting how some people don\u2019t want to do that. They want to kind of hedge their bets. They\u2019re afraid to be wrong, and I don\u2019t want people to be afraid to be wrong. I\u2019m looking for people who are confident enough yet also open enough to have a point of view, but also open to talking about it and maybe changing their mind. I want to see someone who\u2019s constantly thinking and asking questions and wanting to learn more. ", "paragraph_answer": "I typically just start off asking a little bit about how they spent their weekend or something that helps me understand them as a person. From a professional standpoint, I\u2019m looking for people who are curious but who also have a point of view, and so I\u2019ll often ask questions to see if people will give me a specific point of view on an issue, usually within our field. It\u2019s interesting how some people don\u2019t want to do that. They want to kind of hedge their bets. They\u2019re afraid to be wrong, and I don\u2019t want people to be afraid to be wrong. I\u2019m looking for people who are confident enough yet also open enough to have a point of view, but also open to talking about it and maybe changing their mind. I want to see someone who\u2019s constantly thinking and asking questions and wanting to learn more. ", "sentence_answer": " I want to see someone who\u2019s constantly thinking and asking questions and wanting to learn more. "} +{"question": "What NBA player was persuaded not to retire?", "paragraph": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard, once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "answer": "Tim Duncan", "sentence": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire?", "paragraph_sentence": " Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard, once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "paragraph_answer": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard, once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "sentence_answer": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire?"} +{"question": "What NBA player was brought back on a cheap contract?", "paragraph": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard, once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "answer": "Danny Green", "sentence": "Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract?", "paragraph_sentence": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard, once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "paragraph_answer": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard, once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "sentence_answer": "Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract?"} +{"question": "Which NBA player used to be a star, but is now more of an afterthought?", "paragraph": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard, once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "answer": "Dwight Howard", "sentence": "Dwight Howard , once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "paragraph_sentence": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard , once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson. ", "paragraph_answer": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard , once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "sentence_answer": " Dwight Howard , once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson."} +{"question": "What player didn't receive the Most Valuable Player award, but probably should have?", "paragraph": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard, once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "answer": "James Harden", "sentence": "James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant.", "paragraph_sentence": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard, once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "paragraph_answer": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard, once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "sentence_answer": " James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant."} +{"question": "What NBA player became a San Antonio Spur as a star free agent?", "paragraph": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard, once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "answer": "LaMarcus Aldridge", "sentence": "Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge ?", "paragraph_sentence": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge ? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard, once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "paragraph_answer": "Persuade Tim Duncan not to retire? Check. Bring back Danny Green on a below-market contract? Check. Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge ? Check. Persuade David West to join the team practically as a volunteer? Check. Enter the season as one of the two or three teams most likely to win it all for roughly the 17th consecutive season? Check. The San Antonio Spurs have some sort of front-office cheat code. James Harden may have been robbed of a Most Valuable Player Award, regardless of how good Stephen Curry\u2019s team was, but the Houston Rockets were a bit of a mirage, offering little beyond the bearded bon vivant. Dwight Howard, once a league darling, has faded, but the team could play more well-rounded basketball this season after adding Ty Lawson.", "sentence_answer": "Get the league\u2019s top free-agent prize in LaMarcus Aldridge ?"} +{"question": "Who should Catholics not try to convert?", "paragraph": "ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews, but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews. Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote. Titled \u201cThe Gifts and Calling of God Are Irrevocable,\u201d the document was issued by the Vatican\u2019s Commission for Religious Relations with Jews. Addressing an issue that has been a sore point between the two faiths for centuries, the commission wrote that the church was \u201cobliged to view evangelization to Jews, who believe in the one God, in a different manner from that to people of other religions and world views.\u201d It specified that \u201cthe Catholic Church neither conducts nor supports any specific institutional mission work directed towards Jews.\u201d Analysts said the language in the document seemed intended to put the issue to rest.", "answer": "Jews", "sentence": "ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews , but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews.", "paragraph_sentence": " ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews , but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews. Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote. Titled \u201cThe Gifts and Calling of God Are Irrevocable,\u201d the document was issued by the Vatican\u2019s Commission for Religious Relations with Jews. Addressing an issue that has been a sore point between the two faiths for centuries, the commission wrote that the church was \u201cobliged to view evangelization to Jews, who believe in the one God, in a different manner from that to people of other religions and world views.\u201d It specified that \u201cthe Catholic Church neither conducts nor supports any specific institutional mission work directed towards Jews.\u201d Analysts said the language in the document seemed intended to put the issue to rest.", "paragraph_answer": "ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews , but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews. Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote. Titled \u201cThe Gifts and Calling of God Are Irrevocable,\u201d the document was issued by the Vatican\u2019s Commission for Religious Relations with Jews. Addressing an issue that has been a sore point between the two faiths for centuries, the commission wrote that the church was \u201cobliged to view evangelization to Jews, who believe in the one God, in a different manner from that to people of other religions and world views.\u201d It specified that \u201cthe Catholic Church neither conducts nor supports any specific institutional mission work directed towards Jews.\u201d Analysts said the language in the document seemed intended to put the issue to rest.", "sentence_answer": "ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews , but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews."} +{"question": "What is Christianity deeply intertwined with?", "paragraph": "ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews, but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews. Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote. Titled \u201cThe Gifts and Calling of God Are Irrevocable,\u201d the document was issued by the Vatican\u2019s Commission for Religious Relations with Jews. Addressing an issue that has been a sore point between the two faiths for centuries, the commission wrote that the church was \u201cobliged to view evangelization to Jews, who believe in the one God, in a different manner from that to people of other religions and world views.\u201d It specified that \u201cthe Catholic Church neither conducts nor supports any specific institutional mission work directed towards Jews.\u201d Analysts said the language in the document seemed intended to put the issue to rest.", "answer": "Judaism", "sentence": "Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote.", "paragraph_sentence": "ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews, but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews. Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote. Titled \u201cThe Gifts and Calling of God Are Irrevocable,\u201d the document was issued by the Vatican\u2019s Commission for Religious Relations with Jews. Addressing an issue that has been a sore point between the two faiths for centuries, the commission wrote that the church was \u201cobliged to view evangelization to Jews, who believe in the one God, in a different manner from that to people of other religions and world views.\u201d It specified that \u201cthe Catholic Church neither conducts nor supports any specific institutional mission work directed towards Jews.\u201d Analysts said the language in the document seemed intended to put the issue to rest.", "paragraph_answer": "ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews, but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews. Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote. Titled \u201cThe Gifts and Calling of God Are Irrevocable,\u201d the document was issued by the Vatican\u2019s Commission for Religious Relations with Jews. Addressing an issue that has been a sore point between the two faiths for centuries, the commission wrote that the church was \u201cobliged to view evangelization to Jews, who believe in the one God, in a different manner from that to people of other religions and world views.\u201d It specified that \u201cthe Catholic Church neither conducts nor supports any specific institutional mission work directed towards Jews.\u201d Analysts said the language in the document seemed intended to put the issue to rest.", "sentence_answer": "Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote."} +{"question": "What subject should Christians treat with sensitivity?", "paragraph": "ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews, but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews. Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote. Titled \u201cThe Gifts and Calling of God Are Irrevocable,\u201d the document was issued by the Vatican\u2019s Commission for Religious Relations with Jews. Addressing an issue that has been a sore point between the two faiths for centuries, the commission wrote that the church was \u201cobliged to view evangelization to Jews, who believe in the one God, in a different manner from that to people of other religions and world views.\u201d It specified that \u201cthe Catholic Church neither conducts nor supports any specific institutional mission work directed towards Jews.\u201d Analysts said the language in the document seemed intended to put the issue to rest.", "answer": "the Holocaust", "sentence": "Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote.", "paragraph_sentence": "ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews, but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews. Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote. Titled \u201cThe Gifts and Calling of God Are Irrevocable,\u201d the document was issued by the Vatican\u2019s Commission for Religious Relations with Jews. Addressing an issue that has been a sore point between the two faiths for centuries, the commission wrote that the church was \u201cobliged to view evangelization to Jews, who believe in the one God, in a different manner from that to people of other religions and world views.\u201d It specified that \u201cthe Catholic Church neither conducts nor supports any specific institutional mission work directed towards Jews.\u201d Analysts said the language in the document seemed intended to put the issue to rest.", "paragraph_answer": "ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews, but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews. Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote. Titled \u201cThe Gifts and Calling of God Are Irrevocable,\u201d the document was issued by the Vatican\u2019s Commission for Religious Relations with Jews. Addressing an issue that has been a sore point between the two faiths for centuries, the commission wrote that the church was \u201cobliged to view evangelization to Jews, who believe in the one God, in a different manner from that to people of other religions and world views.\u201d It specified that \u201cthe Catholic Church neither conducts nor supports any specific institutional mission work directed towards Jews.\u201d Analysts said the language in the document seemed intended to put the issue to rest.", "sentence_answer": "Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote."} +{"question": "What did analysts conclude about the language in the document?", "paragraph": "ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews, but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews. Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote. Titled \u201cThe Gifts and Calling of God Are Irrevocable,\u201d the document was issued by the Vatican\u2019s Commission for Religious Relations with Jews. Addressing an issue that has been a sore point between the two faiths for centuries, the commission wrote that the church was \u201cobliged to view evangelization to Jews, who believe in the one God, in a different manner from that to people of other religions and world views.\u201d It specified that \u201cthe Catholic Church neither conducts nor supports any specific institutional mission work directed towards Jews.\u201d Analysts said the language in the document seemed intended to put the issue to rest.", "answer": "seemed intended to put the issue to rest", "sentence": "Analysts said the language in the document seemed intended to put the issue to rest .", "paragraph_sentence": "ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews, but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews. Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote. Titled \u201cThe Gifts and Calling of God Are Irrevocable,\u201d the document was issued by the Vatican\u2019s Commission for Religious Relations with Jews. Addressing an issue that has been a sore point between the two faiths for centuries, the commission wrote that the church was \u201cobliged to view evangelization to Jews, who believe in the one God, in a different manner from that to people of other religions and world views.\u201d It specified that \u201cthe Catholic Church neither conducts nor supports any specific institutional mission work directed towards Jews.\u201d Analysts said the language in the document seemed intended to put the issue to rest . ", "paragraph_answer": "ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews, but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews. Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote. Titled \u201cThe Gifts and Calling of God Are Irrevocable,\u201d the document was issued by the Vatican\u2019s Commission for Religious Relations with Jews. Addressing an issue that has been a sore point between the two faiths for centuries, the commission wrote that the church was \u201cobliged to view evangelization to Jews, who believe in the one God, in a different manner from that to people of other religions and world views.\u201d It specified that \u201cthe Catholic Church neither conducts nor supports any specific institutional mission work directed towards Jews.\u201d Analysts said the language in the document seemed intended to put the issue to rest .", "sentence_answer": "Analysts said the language in the document seemed intended to put the issue to rest ."} +{"question": "Who was the church obliged to evangelize to?", "paragraph": "ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews, but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews. Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote. Titled \u201cThe Gifts and Calling of God Are Irrevocable,\u201d the document was issued by the Vatican\u2019s Commission for Religious Relations with Jews. Addressing an issue that has been a sore point between the two faiths for centuries, the commission wrote that the church was \u201cobliged to view evangelization to Jews, who believe in the one God, in a different manner from that to people of other religions and world views.\u201d It specified that \u201cthe Catholic Church neither conducts nor supports any specific institutional mission work directed towards Jews.\u201d Analysts said the language in the document seemed intended to put the issue to rest.", "answer": "Jews", "sentence": "ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews , but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews.", "paragraph_sentence": " ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews , but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews. Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote. Titled \u201cThe Gifts and Calling of God Are Irrevocable,\u201d the document was issued by the Vatican\u2019s Commission for Religious Relations with Jews. Addressing an issue that has been a sore point between the two faiths for centuries, the commission wrote that the church was \u201cobliged to view evangelization to Jews, who believe in the one God, in a different manner from that to people of other religions and world views.\u201d It specified that \u201cthe Catholic Church neither conducts nor supports any specific institutional mission work directed towards Jews.\u201d Analysts said the language in the document seemed intended to put the issue to rest.", "paragraph_answer": "ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews , but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews. Despite a long history of mutual suspicion and conflict, Christianity and Judaism are deeply intertwined, and Christians should treat the subject of the Holocaust with sensitivity and repel any anti-Semitic tendencies, the Vatican wrote. Titled \u201cThe Gifts and Calling of God Are Irrevocable,\u201d the document was issued by the Vatican\u2019s Commission for Religious Relations with Jews. Addressing an issue that has been a sore point between the two faiths for centuries, the commission wrote that the church was \u201cobliged to view evangelization to Jews, who believe in the one God, in a different manner from that to people of other religions and world views.\u201d It specified that \u201cthe Catholic Church neither conducts nor supports any specific institutional mission work directed towards Jews.\u201d Analysts said the language in the document seemed intended to put the issue to rest.", "sentence_answer": "ROME \u2014 Catholics should not try to convert Jews , but should work together with them to fight anti-Semitism, the Vatican said on Thursday in a far-reaching document meant to solidify its increasingly positive relations with Jews."} +{"question": "What is Alberto Melloni director of?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt clearly states that salvation doesn\u2019t come from the Jews\u2019 conversion, but it\u2019s very respectful of their own mission,\u201d said Alberto Melloni, the director of a liberal Catholic research institution, the John XXIII Foundation for Religious Studies in Bologna. He called the message \u201ca courageous and important written document of the Catholic Church.\u201d Coming 50 years after the Vatican formally repudiated the idea of collective Jewish guilt for Jesus\u2019 death, the document emphasized the tight and inescapable link between Christianity and Judaism. \u201cA Christian can never be an anti-Semite, especially because of the Jewish roots of Christianity,\u201d it stated. Cardinal Kurt Koch, the president of the Vatican Commission, said on Thursday that the church\u2019s dialogue with Jews was not just interreligious, but \u201cintrareligious, or intrafamiliar.\u201d Jewish leaders praised the document and the way that Catholic-Jewish relations had progressed.", "answer": "a liberal Catholic research institution", "sentence": "\u201cIt clearly states that salvation doesn\u2019t come from the Jews\u2019 conversion, but it\u2019s very respectful of their own mission,\u201d said Alberto Melloni, the director of a liberal Catholic research institution , the John XXIII Foundation for Religious Studies in Bologna.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cIt clearly states that salvation doesn\u2019t come from the Jews\u2019 conversion, but it\u2019s very respectful of their own mission,\u201d said Alberto Melloni, the director of a liberal Catholic research institution , the John XXIII Foundation for Religious Studies in Bologna. He called the message \u201ca courageous and important written document of the Catholic Church.\u201d Coming 50 years after the Vatican formally repudiated the idea of collective Jewish guilt for Jesus\u2019 death, the document emphasized the tight and inescapable link between Christianity and Judaism. \u201cA Christian can never be an anti-Semite, especially because of the Jewish roots of Christianity,\u201d it stated. Cardinal Kurt Koch, the president of the Vatican Commission, said on Thursday that the church\u2019s dialogue with Jews was not just interreligious, but \u201cintrareligious, or intrafamiliar.\u201d Jewish leaders praised the document and the way that Catholic-Jewish relations had progressed.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt clearly states that salvation doesn\u2019t come from the Jews\u2019 conversion, but it\u2019s very respectful of their own mission,\u201d said Alberto Melloni, the director of a liberal Catholic research institution , the John XXIII Foundation for Religious Studies in Bologna. He called the message \u201ca courageous and important written document of the Catholic Church.\u201d Coming 50 years after the Vatican formally repudiated the idea of collective Jewish guilt for Jesus\u2019 death, the document emphasized the tight and inescapable link between Christianity and Judaism. \u201cA Christian can never be an anti-Semite, especially because of the Jewish roots of Christianity,\u201d it stated. Cardinal Kurt Koch, the president of the Vatican Commission, said on Thursday that the church\u2019s dialogue with Jews was not just interreligious, but \u201cintrareligious, or intrafamiliar.\u201d Jewish leaders praised the document and the way that Catholic-Jewish relations had progressed.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt clearly states that salvation doesn\u2019t come from the Jews\u2019 conversion, but it\u2019s very respectful of their own mission,\u201d said Alberto Melloni, the director of a liberal Catholic research institution , the John XXIII Foundation for Religious Studies in Bologna."} +{"question": "What has a tight and inescapable link?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt clearly states that salvation doesn\u2019t come from the Jews\u2019 conversion, but it\u2019s very respectful of their own mission,\u201d said Alberto Melloni, the director of a liberal Catholic research institution, the John XXIII Foundation for Religious Studies in Bologna. He called the message \u201ca courageous and important written document of the Catholic Church.\u201d Coming 50 years after the Vatican formally repudiated the idea of collective Jewish guilt for Jesus\u2019 death, the document emphasized the tight and inescapable link between Christianity and Judaism. \u201cA Christian can never be an anti-Semite, especially because of the Jewish roots of Christianity,\u201d it stated. Cardinal Kurt Koch, the president of the Vatican Commission, said on Thursday that the church\u2019s dialogue with Jews was not just interreligious, but \u201cintrareligious, or intrafamiliar.\u201d Jewish leaders praised the document and the way that Catholic-Jewish relations had progressed.", "answer": "Christianity and Judaism", "sentence": "Coming 50 years after the Vatican formally repudiated the idea of collective Jewish guilt for Jesus\u2019 death, the document emphasized the tight and inescapable link between Christianity and Judaism .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt clearly states that salvation doesn\u2019t come from the Jews\u2019 conversion, but it\u2019s very respectful of their own mission,\u201d said Alberto Melloni, the director of a liberal Catholic research institution, the John XXIII Foundation for Religious Studies in Bologna. He called the message \u201ca courageous and important written document of the Catholic Church.\u201d Coming 50 years after the Vatican formally repudiated the idea of collective Jewish guilt for Jesus\u2019 death, the document emphasized the tight and inescapable link between Christianity and Judaism . \u201cA Christian can never be an anti-Semite, especially because of the Jewish roots of Christianity,\u201d it stated. Cardinal Kurt Koch, the president of the Vatican Commission, said on Thursday that the church\u2019s dialogue with Jews was not just interreligious, but \u201cintrareligious, or intrafamiliar.\u201d Jewish leaders praised the document and the way that Catholic-Jewish relations had progressed.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt clearly states that salvation doesn\u2019t come from the Jews\u2019 conversion, but it\u2019s very respectful of their own mission,\u201d said Alberto Melloni, the director of a liberal Catholic research institution, the John XXIII Foundation for Religious Studies in Bologna. He called the message \u201ca courageous and important written document of the Catholic Church.\u201d Coming 50 years after the Vatican formally repudiated the idea of collective Jewish guilt for Jesus\u2019 death, the document emphasized the tight and inescapable link between Christianity and Judaism . \u201cA Christian can never be an anti-Semite, especially because of the Jewish roots of Christianity,\u201d it stated. Cardinal Kurt Koch, the president of the Vatican Commission, said on Thursday that the church\u2019s dialogue with Jews was not just interreligious, but \u201cintrareligious, or intrafamiliar.\u201d Jewish leaders praised the document and the way that Catholic-Jewish relations had progressed.", "sentence_answer": "Coming 50 years after the Vatican formally repudiated the idea of collective Jewish guilt for Jesus\u2019 death, the document emphasized the tight and inescapable link between Christianity and Judaism ."} +{"question": "What can a Christian never be?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt clearly states that salvation doesn\u2019t come from the Jews\u2019 conversion, but it\u2019s very respectful of their own mission,\u201d said Alberto Melloni, the director of a liberal Catholic research institution, the John XXIII Foundation for Religious Studies in Bologna. He called the message \u201ca courageous and important written document of the Catholic Church.\u201d Coming 50 years after the Vatican formally repudiated the idea of collective Jewish guilt for Jesus\u2019 death, the document emphasized the tight and inescapable link between Christianity and Judaism. \u201cA Christian can never be an anti-Semite, especially because of the Jewish roots of Christianity,\u201d it stated. Cardinal Kurt Koch, the president of the Vatican Commission, said on Thursday that the church\u2019s dialogue with Jews was not just interreligious, but \u201cintrareligious, or intrafamiliar.\u201d Jewish leaders praised the document and the way that Catholic-Jewish relations had progressed.", "answer": "an anti-Semite", "sentence": "\u201cA Christian can never be an anti-Semite , especially because of the Jewish roots of Christianity,\u201d it stated.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt clearly states that salvation doesn\u2019t come from the Jews\u2019 conversion, but it\u2019s very respectful of their own mission,\u201d said Alberto Melloni, the director of a liberal Catholic research institution, the John XXIII Foundation for Religious Studies in Bologna. He called the message \u201ca courageous and important written document of the Catholic Church.\u201d Coming 50 years after the Vatican formally repudiated the idea of collective Jewish guilt for Jesus\u2019 death, the document emphasized the tight and inescapable link between Christianity and Judaism. \u201cA Christian can never be an anti-Semite , especially because of the Jewish roots of Christianity,\u201d it stated. Cardinal Kurt Koch, the president of the Vatican Commission, said on Thursday that the church\u2019s dialogue with Jews was not just interreligious, but \u201cintrareligious, or intrafamiliar.\u201d Jewish leaders praised the document and the way that Catholic-Jewish relations had progressed.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt clearly states that salvation doesn\u2019t come from the Jews\u2019 conversion, but it\u2019s very respectful of their own mission,\u201d said Alberto Melloni, the director of a liberal Catholic research institution, the John XXIII Foundation for Religious Studies in Bologna. He called the message \u201ca courageous and important written document of the Catholic Church.\u201d Coming 50 years after the Vatican formally repudiated the idea of collective Jewish guilt for Jesus\u2019 death, the document emphasized the tight and inescapable link between Christianity and Judaism. \u201cA Christian can never be an anti-Semite , especially because of the Jewish roots of Christianity,\u201d it stated. Cardinal Kurt Koch, the president of the Vatican Commission, said on Thursday that the church\u2019s dialogue with Jews was not just interreligious, but \u201cintrareligious, or intrafamiliar.\u201d Jewish leaders praised the document and the way that Catholic-Jewish relations had progressed.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cA Christian can never be an anti-Semite , especially because of the Jewish roots of Christianity,\u201d it stated."} +{"question": "How did Jewish leaders react to the Church's statements?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt clearly states that salvation doesn\u2019t come from the Jews\u2019 conversion, but it\u2019s very respectful of their own mission,\u201d said Alberto Melloni, the director of a liberal Catholic research institution, the John XXIII Foundation for Religious Studies in Bologna. He called the message \u201ca courageous and important written document of the Catholic Church.\u201d Coming 50 years after the Vatican formally repudiated the idea of collective Jewish guilt for Jesus\u2019 death, the document emphasized the tight and inescapable link between Christianity and Judaism. \u201cA Christian can never be an anti-Semite, especially because of the Jewish roots of Christianity,\u201d it stated. Cardinal Kurt Koch, the president of the Vatican Commission, said on Thursday that the church\u2019s dialogue with Jews was not just interreligious, but \u201cintrareligious, or intrafamiliar.\u201d Jewish leaders praised the document and the way that Catholic-Jewish relations had progressed.", "answer": "praised the document and the way that Catholic-Jewish relations had progressed", "sentence": "Jewish leaders praised the document and the way that Catholic-Jewish relations had progressed .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt clearly states that salvation doesn\u2019t come from the Jews\u2019 conversion, but it\u2019s very respectful of their own mission,\u201d said Alberto Melloni, the director of a liberal Catholic research institution, the John XXIII Foundation for Religious Studies in Bologna. He called the message \u201ca courageous and important written document of the Catholic Church.\u201d Coming 50 years after the Vatican formally repudiated the idea of collective Jewish guilt for Jesus\u2019 death, the document emphasized the tight and inescapable link between Christianity and Judaism. \u201cA Christian can never be an anti-Semite, especially because of the Jewish roots of Christianity,\u201d it stated. Cardinal Kurt Koch, the president of the Vatican Commission, said on Thursday that the church\u2019s dialogue with Jews was not just interreligious, but \u201cintrareligious, or intrafamiliar.\u201d Jewish leaders praised the document and the way that Catholic-Jewish relations had progressed . ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt clearly states that salvation doesn\u2019t come from the Jews\u2019 conversion, but it\u2019s very respectful of their own mission,\u201d said Alberto Melloni, the director of a liberal Catholic research institution, the John XXIII Foundation for Religious Studies in Bologna. He called the message \u201ca courageous and important written document of the Catholic Church.\u201d Coming 50 years after the Vatican formally repudiated the idea of collective Jewish guilt for Jesus\u2019 death, the document emphasized the tight and inescapable link between Christianity and Judaism. \u201cA Christian can never be an anti-Semite, especially because of the Jewish roots of Christianity,\u201d it stated. Cardinal Kurt Koch, the president of the Vatican Commission, said on Thursday that the church\u2019s dialogue with Jews was not just interreligious, but \u201cintrareligious, or intrafamiliar.\u201d Jewish leaders praised the document and the way that Catholic-Jewish relations had progressed .", "sentence_answer": "Jewish leaders praised the document and the way that Catholic-Jewish relations had progressed ."} +{"question": "What have router manufactures recently done?", "paragraph": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind, said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around. Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices.", "answer": "improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind", "sentence": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind , said Mr. Fraser.", "paragraph_sentence": " Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind , said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around. Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices.", "paragraph_answer": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind , said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around. Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices.", "sentence_answer": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind , said Mr. Fraser."} +{"question": "What did Mr. Fraser say?", "paragraph": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind, said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around. Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices.", "answer": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind,", "sentence": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind, said Mr. Fraser.", "paragraph_sentence": " Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind, said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around. Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices.", "paragraph_answer": " Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind, said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around. Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices.", "sentence_answer": " Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind, said Mr. Fraser."} +{"question": "What do new routers often include?", "paragraph": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind, said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around. Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices.", "answer": "smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around", "sentence": "New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around .", "paragraph_sentence": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind, said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around . Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices.", "paragraph_answer": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind, said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around . Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices.", "sentence_answer": "New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around ."} +{"question": "What can be blamed for Wi-Fi headaches?", "paragraph": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind, said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around. Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices.", "answer": "Consumer behavior", "sentence": "Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches.", "paragraph_sentence": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind, said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around. Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices.", "paragraph_answer": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind, said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around. Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices.", "sentence_answer": " Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches."} +{"question": "What does an outdated router become?", "paragraph": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind, said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around. Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices.", "answer": "a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices", "sentence": "An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices .", "paragraph_sentence": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind, said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around. Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices . ", "paragraph_answer": "Router manufacturers have more recently improved Wi-Fi technology with mobile devices in mind, said Mr. Fraser. New routers often include smarter antennas that do a better job of assembling signals and beaming energy toward devices that are moving around. Some features inside newer routers also help reduce signal interference. Newer routers typically can transmit data over two radio frequencies \u2014 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz \u2014 and give you the option to split them up into two separate Wi-Fi networks. In general, the 2.4 GHz band transmits data farther and is more crowded because many types of devices, like cordless phones and microwaves, use that frequency. The 5 GHz band is less congested but typically travels a shorter distance. Consumer behavior is also to blame for Wi-Fi headaches. People may wait years before buying a new router, so their devices might be more up-to-date than their infrastructure. An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices .", "sentence_answer": "An outdated router becomes a bottleneck that hinders the speeds of web downloads and file transfers between connected devices ."} +{"question": "What does a newer router improve?", "paragraph": "Not only can a newer router improve the speed and range for users, the routers typically have upgraded internal components and strong external antennas. Many also support the latest Wi-Fi standard \u2014 802.11ac \u2014 which has top speeds that are nearly three times faster than the previous standard, 802.11n, for the fastest wireless devices you can buy today. Many smartphones, tablets and laptops released since 2013 support 802.11ac. But even older devices that support only the previous standard, 802.11n, can enjoy faster speeds at long range with a newer 802.11ac router.", "answer": "the speed and range for users", "sentence": "Not only can a newer router improve the speed and range for users , the routers typically have upgraded internal components and strong external antennas.", "paragraph_sentence": " Not only can a newer router improve the speed and range for users , the routers typically have upgraded internal components and strong external antennas. Many also support the latest Wi-Fi standard \u2014 802.11ac \u2014 which has top speeds that are nearly three times faster than the previous standard, 802.11n, for the fastest wireless devices you can buy today. Many smartphones, tablets and laptops released since 2013 support 802.11ac. But even older devices that support only the previous standard, 802.11n, can enjoy faster speeds at long range with a newer 802.11ac router.", "paragraph_answer": "Not only can a newer router improve the speed and range for users , the routers typically have upgraded internal components and strong external antennas. Many also support the latest Wi-Fi standard \u2014 802.11ac \u2014 which has top speeds that are nearly three times faster than the previous standard, 802.11n, for the fastest wireless devices you can buy today. Many smartphones, tablets and laptops released since 2013 support 802.11ac. But even older devices that support only the previous standard, 802.11n, can enjoy faster speeds at long range with a newer 802.11ac router.", "sentence_answer": "Not only can a newer router improve the speed and range for users , the routers typically have upgraded internal components and strong external antennas."} +{"question": "What upgrades are also included in newer router?", "paragraph": "Not only can a newer router improve the speed and range for users, the routers typically have upgraded internal components and strong external antennas. Many also support the latest Wi-Fi standard \u2014 802.11ac \u2014 which has top speeds that are nearly three times faster than the previous standard, 802.11n, for the fastest wireless devices you can buy today. Many smartphones, tablets and laptops released since 2013 support 802.11ac. But even older devices that support only the previous standard, 802.11n, can enjoy faster speeds at long range with a newer 802.11ac router.", "answer": "upgraded internal components and strong external antennas", "sentence": "Not only can a newer router improve the speed and range for users, the routers typically have upgraded internal components and strong external antennas .", "paragraph_sentence": " Not only can a newer router improve the speed and range for users, the routers typically have upgraded internal components and strong external antennas . Many also support the latest Wi-Fi standard \u2014 802.11ac \u2014 which has top speeds that are nearly three times faster than the previous standard, 802.11n, for the fastest wireless devices you can buy today. Many smartphones, tablets and laptops released since 2013 support 802.11ac. But even older devices that support only the previous standard, 802.11n, can enjoy faster speeds at long range with a newer 802.11ac router.", "paragraph_answer": "Not only can a newer router improve the speed and range for users, the routers typically have upgraded internal components and strong external antennas . Many also support the latest Wi-Fi standard \u2014 802.11ac \u2014 which has top speeds that are nearly three times faster than the previous standard, 802.11n, for the fastest wireless devices you can buy today. Many smartphones, tablets and laptops released since 2013 support 802.11ac. But even older devices that support only the previous standard, 802.11n, can enjoy faster speeds at long range with a newer 802.11ac router.", "sentence_answer": "Not only can a newer router improve the speed and range for users, the routers typically have upgraded internal components and strong external antennas ."} +{"question": "Which standard do many of newer router support?", "paragraph": "Not only can a newer router improve the speed and range for users, the routers typically have upgraded internal components and strong external antennas. Many also support the latest Wi-Fi standard \u2014 802.11ac \u2014 which has top speeds that are nearly three times faster than the previous standard, 802.11n, for the fastest wireless devices you can buy today. Many smartphones, tablets and laptops released since 2013 support 802.11ac. But even older devices that support only the previous standard, 802.11n, can enjoy faster speeds at long range with a newer 802.11ac router.", "answer": "the latest Wi-Fi standard \u2014 802.11ac", "sentence": "Many also support the latest Wi-Fi standard \u2014 802.11ac \u2014 which has top speeds that are nearly three times faster than the previous standard, 802.11n, for the fastest wireless devices you can buy today.", "paragraph_sentence": "Not only can a newer router improve the speed and range for users, the routers typically have upgraded internal components and strong external antennas. Many also support the latest Wi-Fi standard \u2014 802.11ac \u2014 which has top speeds that are nearly three times faster than the previous standard, 802.11n, for the fastest wireless devices you can buy today. Many smartphones, tablets and laptops released since 2013 support 802.11ac. But even older devices that support only the previous standard, 802.11n, can enjoy faster speeds at long range with a newer 802.11ac router.", "paragraph_answer": "Not only can a newer router improve the speed and range for users, the routers typically have upgraded internal components and strong external antennas. Many also support the latest Wi-Fi standard \u2014 802.11ac \u2014 which has top speeds that are nearly three times faster than the previous standard, 802.11n, for the fastest wireless devices you can buy today. Many smartphones, tablets and laptops released since 2013 support 802.11ac. But even older devices that support only the previous standard, 802.11n, can enjoy faster speeds at long range with a newer 802.11ac router.", "sentence_answer": "Many also support the latest Wi-Fi standard \u2014 802.11ac \u2014 which has top speeds that are nearly three times faster than the previous standard, 802.11n, for the fastest wireless devices you can buy today."} +{"question": "What advantage does the latest Wi-Fi offer?", "paragraph": "Not only can a newer router improve the speed and range for users, the routers typically have upgraded internal components and strong external antennas. Many also support the latest Wi-Fi standard \u2014 802.11ac \u2014 which has top speeds that are nearly three times faster than the previous standard, 802.11n, for the fastest wireless devices you can buy today. Many smartphones, tablets and laptops released since 2013 support 802.11ac. But even older devices that support only the previous standard, 802.11n, can enjoy faster speeds at long range with a newer 802.11ac router.", "answer": "top speeds that are nearly three times faster than the previous standard, 802.11n", "sentence": "Many also support the latest Wi-Fi standard \u2014 802.11ac \u2014 which has top speeds that are nearly three times faster than the previous standard, 802.11n , for the fastest wireless devices you can buy today.", "paragraph_sentence": "Not only can a newer router improve the speed and range for users, the routers typically have upgraded internal components and strong external antennas. Many also support the latest Wi-Fi standard \u2014 802.11ac \u2014 which has top speeds that are nearly three times faster than the previous standard, 802.11n , for the fastest wireless devices you can buy today. Many smartphones, tablets and laptops released since 2013 support 802.11ac. But even older devices that support only the previous standard, 802.11n, can enjoy faster speeds at long range with a newer 802.11ac router.", "paragraph_answer": "Not only can a newer router improve the speed and range for users, the routers typically have upgraded internal components and strong external antennas. Many also support the latest Wi-Fi standard \u2014 802.11ac \u2014 which has top speeds that are nearly three times faster than the previous standard, 802.11n , for the fastest wireless devices you can buy today. Many smartphones, tablets and laptops released since 2013 support 802.11ac. But even older devices that support only the previous standard, 802.11n, can enjoy faster speeds at long range with a newer 802.11ac router.", "sentence_answer": "Many also support the latest Wi-Fi standard \u2014 802.11ac \u2014 which has top speeds that are nearly three times faster than the previous standard, 802.11n , for the fastest wireless devices you can buy today."} +{"question": "How many routers did the Wirecutter use?", "paragraph": "For these tests, The Wirecutter used two routers: its top 802.11ac router recommendation, TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7, and an older 802.11n router, Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700. It tried them with a 2012 iPhone 5, a 2014 iPhone 6 Plus, a 2013 HTC One M7, a 2015 Samsung Galaxy S6, a 2012 MacBook Air and a 2014 MacBook Air.", "answer": "two", "sentence": "For these tests, The Wirecutter used two routers: its top 802.11ac router recommendation, TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7, and an older 802.11n router, Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700.", "paragraph_sentence": " For these tests, The Wirecutter used two routers: its top 802.11ac router recommendation, TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7, and an older 802.11n router, Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700. It tried them with a 2012 iPhone 5, a 2014 iPhone 6 Plus, a 2013 HTC One M7, a 2015 Samsung Galaxy S6, a 2012 MacBook Air and a 2014 MacBook Air.", "paragraph_answer": "For these tests, The Wirecutter used two routers: its top 802.11ac router recommendation, TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7, and an older 802.11n router, Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700. It tried them with a 2012 iPhone 5, a 2014 iPhone 6 Plus, a 2013 HTC One M7, a 2015 Samsung Galaxy S6, a 2012 MacBook Air and a 2014 MacBook Air.", "sentence_answer": "For these tests, The Wirecutter used two routers: its top 802.11ac router recommendation, TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7, and an older 802.11n router, Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700."} +{"question": "What was the Wirecutter being used for?", "paragraph": "For these tests, The Wirecutter used two routers: its top 802.11ac router recommendation, TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7, and an older 802.11n router, Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700. It tried them with a 2012 iPhone 5, a 2014 iPhone 6 Plus, a 2013 HTC One M7, a 2015 Samsung Galaxy S6, a 2012 MacBook Air and a 2014 MacBook Air.", "answer": "tests", "sentence": "For these tests , The Wirecutter used two routers: its top 802.11ac router recommendation, TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7, and an older 802.11n router, Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700.", "paragraph_sentence": " For these tests , The Wirecutter used two routers: its top 802.11ac router recommendation, TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7, and an older 802.11n router, Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700. It tried them with a 2012 iPhone 5, a 2014 iPhone 6 Plus, a 2013 HTC One M7, a 2015 Samsung Galaxy S6, a 2012 MacBook Air and a 2014 MacBook Air.", "paragraph_answer": "For these tests , The Wirecutter used two routers: its top 802.11ac router recommendation, TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7, and an older 802.11n router, Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700. It tried them with a 2012 iPhone 5, a 2014 iPhone 6 Plus, a 2013 HTC One M7, a 2015 Samsung Galaxy S6, a 2012 MacBook Air and a 2014 MacBook Air.", "sentence_answer": "For these tests , The Wirecutter used two routers: its top 802.11ac router recommendation, TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7, and an older 802.11n router, Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700."} +{"question": "What was the top router recommendation?", "paragraph": "For these tests, The Wirecutter used two routers: its top 802.11ac router recommendation, TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7, and an older 802.11n router, Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700. It tried them with a 2012 iPhone 5, a 2014 iPhone 6 Plus, a 2013 HTC One M7, a 2015 Samsung Galaxy S6, a 2012 MacBook Air and a 2014 MacBook Air.", "answer": "TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7", "sentence": "For these tests, The Wirecutter used two routers: its top 802.11ac router recommendation, TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7 , and an older 802.11n router, Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700.", "paragraph_sentence": " For these tests, The Wirecutter used two routers: its top 802.11ac router recommendation, TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7 , and an older 802.11n router, Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700. It tried them with a 2012 iPhone 5, a 2014 iPhone 6 Plus, a 2013 HTC One M7, a 2015 Samsung Galaxy S6, a 2012 MacBook Air and a 2014 MacBook Air.", "paragraph_answer": "For these tests, The Wirecutter used two routers: its top 802.11ac router recommendation, TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7 , and an older 802.11n router, Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700. It tried them with a 2012 iPhone 5, a 2014 iPhone 6 Plus, a 2013 HTC One M7, a 2015 Samsung Galaxy S6, a 2012 MacBook Air and a 2014 MacBook Air.", "sentence_answer": "For these tests, The Wirecutter used two routers: its top 802.11ac router recommendation, TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7 , and an older 802.11n router, Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700."} +{"question": "What older router was used?", "paragraph": "For these tests, The Wirecutter used two routers: its top 802.11ac router recommendation, TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7, and an older 802.11n router, Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700. It tried them with a 2012 iPhone 5, a 2014 iPhone 6 Plus, a 2013 HTC One M7, a 2015 Samsung Galaxy S6, a 2012 MacBook Air and a 2014 MacBook Air.", "answer": "Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700", "sentence": "For these tests, The Wirecutter used two routers: its top 802.11ac router recommendation, TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7, and an older 802.11n router, Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700 .", "paragraph_sentence": " For these tests, The Wirecutter used two routers: its top 802.11ac router recommendation, TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7, and an older 802.11n router, Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700 . It tried them with a 2012 iPhone 5, a 2014 iPhone 6 Plus, a 2013 HTC One M7, a 2015 Samsung Galaxy S6, a 2012 MacBook Air and a 2014 MacBook Air.", "paragraph_answer": "For these tests, The Wirecutter used two routers: its top 802.11ac router recommendation, TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7, and an older 802.11n router, Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700 . It tried them with a 2012 iPhone 5, a 2014 iPhone 6 Plus, a 2013 HTC One M7, a 2015 Samsung Galaxy S6, a 2012 MacBook Air and a 2014 MacBook Air.", "sentence_answer": "For these tests, The Wirecutter used two routers: its top 802.11ac router recommendation, TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7, and an older 802.11n router, Netgear\u2019s WNDR3700 ."} +{"question": "Who is David Murphy?", "paragraph": "To get an idea how each device performed with each router, The Wirecutter\u2019s Wi-Fi expert, David Murphy, tested file transfer speeds, video streaming speeds, music streaming quality and video call quality at a short range of 11 feet and a long range of 43 feet. Most tested devices had 19 percent to 54 percent faster download speeds and shaved 3 to 48 percent off their file-transfer times when paired with the Archer C7 compared with the older 802.11n Netgear router. The devices also did better on the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi network than on its 2.4GHz network at the same locations. In comparison, The Wirecutter could not connect to the Netgear router\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi at its long-distance test location.", "answer": "The Wirecutter\u2019s Wi-Fi expert", "sentence": "To get an idea how each device performed with each router, The Wirecutter\u2019s Wi-Fi expert , David Murphy, tested file transfer speeds, video streaming speeds, music streaming quality and video call quality at a short range of 11 feet and a long range of 43 feet.", "paragraph_sentence": " To get an idea how each device performed with each router, The Wirecutter\u2019s Wi-Fi expert , David Murphy, tested file transfer speeds, video streaming speeds, music streaming quality and video call quality at a short range of 11 feet and a long range of 43 feet. Most tested devices had 19 percent to 54 percent faster download speeds and shaved 3 to 48 percent off their file-transfer times when paired with the Archer C7 compared with the older 802.11n Netgear router. The devices also did better on the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi network than on its 2.4GHz network at the same locations. In comparison, The Wirecutter could not connect to the Netgear router\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi at its long-distance test location.", "paragraph_answer": "To get an idea how each device performed with each router, The Wirecutter\u2019s Wi-Fi expert , David Murphy, tested file transfer speeds, video streaming speeds, music streaming quality and video call quality at a short range of 11 feet and a long range of 43 feet. Most tested devices had 19 percent to 54 percent faster download speeds and shaved 3 to 48 percent off their file-transfer times when paired with the Archer C7 compared with the older 802.11n Netgear router. The devices also did better on the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi network than on its 2.4GHz network at the same locations. In comparison, The Wirecutter could not connect to the Netgear router\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi at its long-distance test location.", "sentence_answer": "To get an idea how each device performed with each router, The Wirecutter\u2019s Wi-Fi expert , David Murphy, tested file transfer speeds, video streaming speeds, music streaming quality and video call quality at a short range of 11 feet and a long range of 43 feet."} +{"question": "What criteria was the router test performed on?", "paragraph": "To get an idea how each device performed with each router, The Wirecutter\u2019s Wi-Fi expert, David Murphy, tested file transfer speeds, video streaming speeds, music streaming quality and video call quality at a short range of 11 feet and a long range of 43 feet. Most tested devices had 19 percent to 54 percent faster download speeds and shaved 3 to 48 percent off their file-transfer times when paired with the Archer C7 compared with the older 802.11n Netgear router. The devices also did better on the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi network than on its 2.4GHz network at the same locations. In comparison, The Wirecutter could not connect to the Netgear router\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi at its long-distance test location.", "answer": "file transfer speeds, video streaming speeds, music streaming quality and video call quality", "sentence": "To get an idea how each device performed with each router, The Wirecutter\u2019s Wi-Fi expert, David Murphy, tested file transfer speeds, video streaming speeds, music streaming quality and video call quality at a short range of 11 feet and a long range of 43 feet.", "paragraph_sentence": " To get an idea how each device performed with each router, The Wirecutter\u2019s Wi-Fi expert, David Murphy, tested file transfer speeds, video streaming speeds, music streaming quality and video call quality at a short range of 11 feet and a long range of 43 feet. Most tested devices had 19 percent to 54 percent faster download speeds and shaved 3 to 48 percent off their file-transfer times when paired with the Archer C7 compared with the older 802.11n Netgear router. The devices also did better on the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi network than on its 2.4GHz network at the same locations. In comparison, The Wirecutter could not connect to the Netgear router\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi at its long-distance test location.", "paragraph_answer": "To get an idea how each device performed with each router, The Wirecutter\u2019s Wi-Fi expert, David Murphy, tested file transfer speeds, video streaming speeds, music streaming quality and video call quality at a short range of 11 feet and a long range of 43 feet. Most tested devices had 19 percent to 54 percent faster download speeds and shaved 3 to 48 percent off their file-transfer times when paired with the Archer C7 compared with the older 802.11n Netgear router. The devices also did better on the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi network than on its 2.4GHz network at the same locations. In comparison, The Wirecutter could not connect to the Netgear router\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi at its long-distance test location.", "sentence_answer": "To get an idea how each device performed with each router, The Wirecutter\u2019s Wi-Fi expert, David Murphy, tested file transfer speeds, video streaming speeds, music streaming quality and video call quality at a short range of 11 feet and a long range of 43 feet."} +{"question": "What was the range of the test?", "paragraph": "To get an idea how each device performed with each router, The Wirecutter\u2019s Wi-Fi expert, David Murphy, tested file transfer speeds, video streaming speeds, music streaming quality and video call quality at a short range of 11 feet and a long range of 43 feet. Most tested devices had 19 percent to 54 percent faster download speeds and shaved 3 to 48 percent off their file-transfer times when paired with the Archer C7 compared with the older 802.11n Netgear router. The devices also did better on the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi network than on its 2.4GHz network at the same locations. In comparison, The Wirecutter could not connect to the Netgear router\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi at its long-distance test location.", "answer": "a short range of 11 feet and a long range of 43 feet", "sentence": "To get an idea how each device performed with each router, The Wirecutter\u2019s Wi-Fi expert, David Murphy, tested file transfer speeds, video streaming speeds, music streaming quality and video call quality at a short range of 11 feet and a long range of 43 feet .", "paragraph_sentence": " To get an idea how each device performed with each router, The Wirecutter\u2019s Wi-Fi expert, David Murphy, tested file transfer speeds, video streaming speeds, music streaming quality and video call quality at a short range of 11 feet and a long range of 43 feet . Most tested devices had 19 percent to 54 percent faster download speeds and shaved 3 to 48 percent off their file-transfer times when paired with the Archer C7 compared with the older 802.11n Netgear router. The devices also did better on the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi network than on its 2.4GHz network at the same locations. In comparison, The Wirecutter could not connect to the Netgear router\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi at its long-distance test location.", "paragraph_answer": "To get an idea how each device performed with each router, The Wirecutter\u2019s Wi-Fi expert, David Murphy, tested file transfer speeds, video streaming speeds, music streaming quality and video call quality at a short range of 11 feet and a long range of 43 feet . Most tested devices had 19 percent to 54 percent faster download speeds and shaved 3 to 48 percent off their file-transfer times when paired with the Archer C7 compared with the older 802.11n Netgear router. The devices also did better on the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi network than on its 2.4GHz network at the same locations. In comparison, The Wirecutter could not connect to the Netgear router\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi at its long-distance test location.", "sentence_answer": "To get an idea how each device performed with each router, The Wirecutter\u2019s Wi-Fi expert, David Murphy, tested file transfer speeds, video streaming speeds, music streaming quality and video call quality at a short range of 11 feet and a long range of 43 feet ."} +{"question": "What did the devices do better on?", "paragraph": "To get an idea how each device performed with each router, The Wirecutter\u2019s Wi-Fi expert, David Murphy, tested file transfer speeds, video streaming speeds, music streaming quality and video call quality at a short range of 11 feet and a long range of 43 feet. Most tested devices had 19 percent to 54 percent faster download speeds and shaved 3 to 48 percent off their file-transfer times when paired with the Archer C7 compared with the older 802.11n Netgear router. The devices also did better on the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi network than on its 2.4GHz network at the same locations. In comparison, The Wirecutter could not connect to the Netgear router\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi at its long-distance test location.", "answer": "the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi network", "sentence": "The devices also did better on the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi network than on its 2.4GHz network at the same locations.", "paragraph_sentence": "To get an idea how each device performed with each router, The Wirecutter\u2019s Wi-Fi expert, David Murphy, tested file transfer speeds, video streaming speeds, music streaming quality and video call quality at a short range of 11 feet and a long range of 43 feet. Most tested devices had 19 percent to 54 percent faster download speeds and shaved 3 to 48 percent off their file-transfer times when paired with the Archer C7 compared with the older 802.11n Netgear router. The devices also did better on the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi network than on its 2.4GHz network at the same locations. In comparison, The Wirecutter could not connect to the Netgear router\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi at its long-distance test location.", "paragraph_answer": "To get an idea how each device performed with each router, The Wirecutter\u2019s Wi-Fi expert, David Murphy, tested file transfer speeds, video streaming speeds, music streaming quality and video call quality at a short range of 11 feet and a long range of 43 feet. Most tested devices had 19 percent to 54 percent faster download speeds and shaved 3 to 48 percent off their file-transfer times when paired with the Archer C7 compared with the older 802.11n Netgear router. The devices also did better on the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi network than on its 2.4GHz network at the same locations. In comparison, The Wirecutter could not connect to the Netgear router\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi at its long-distance test location.", "sentence_answer": "The devices also did better on the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi network than on its 2.4GHz network at the same locations."} +{"question": "What is the Archer C7's strength?", "paragraph": "The Archer C7\u2019s exceptional performance on a 5 GHz signal is its strength. Devices often had the same download speeds at long range as short range when connected to the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi. But at the longer distance, when switched to the Archer C7\u2019s 2.4GHz network, each device\u2019s download speeds dropped, sometimes by more than 80 percent. In summary: For a stronger, faster wireless connection, stay on the router\u2019s 5 GHz band for as long as you can. Older routers aren\u2019t the best at that; a newer router like TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7 is a much better option. Buying Advice The best router for most people is the Archer C7 ($100). It\u2019s a dual-band 802.11ac router, meaning it can run both 2.4GHz and 5 GHz Wi-Fi networks, and it supports the fastest Wi-Fi speeds of every wireless device you can buy, including the MacBook Pro, the Samsung Galaxy S6 or the brand-new iPhone 6s. The Archer C7 is faster over longer distances than most routers that cost $150 or more, and it\u2019s the best value of the more than two dozen routers The Wirecutter tested in the last two years.", "answer": "exceptional performance on a 5 GHz signal", "sentence": "The Archer C7\u2019s exceptional performance on a 5 GHz signal is its strength.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Archer C7\u2019s exceptional performance on a 5 GHz signal is its strength. Devices often had the same download speeds at long range as short range when connected to the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi. But at the longer distance, when switched to the Archer C7\u2019s 2.4GHz network, each device\u2019s download speeds dropped, sometimes by more than 80 percent. In summary: For a stronger, faster wireless connection, stay on the router\u2019s 5 GHz band for as long as you can. Older routers aren\u2019t the best at that; a newer router like TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7 is a much better option. Buying Advice The best router for most people is the Archer C7 ($100). It\u2019s a dual-band 802.11ac router, meaning it can run both 2.4GHz and 5 GHz Wi-Fi networks, and it supports the fastest Wi-Fi speeds of every wireless device you can buy, including the MacBook Pro, the Samsung Galaxy S6 or the brand-new iPhone 6s. The Archer C7 is faster over longer distances than most routers that cost $150 or more, and it\u2019s the best value of the more than two dozen routers The Wirecutter tested in the last two years.", "paragraph_answer": "The Archer C7\u2019s exceptional performance on a 5 GHz signal is its strength. Devices often had the same download speeds at long range as short range when connected to the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi. But at the longer distance, when switched to the Archer C7\u2019s 2.4GHz network, each device\u2019s download speeds dropped, sometimes by more than 80 percent. In summary: For a stronger, faster wireless connection, stay on the router\u2019s 5 GHz band for as long as you can. Older routers aren\u2019t the best at that; a newer router like TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7 is a much better option. Buying Advice The best router for most people is the Archer C7 ($100). It\u2019s a dual-band 802.11ac router, meaning it can run both 2.4GHz and 5 GHz Wi-Fi networks, and it supports the fastest Wi-Fi speeds of every wireless device you can buy, including the MacBook Pro, the Samsung Galaxy S6 or the brand-new iPhone 6s. The Archer C7 is faster over longer distances than most routers that cost $150 or more, and it\u2019s the best value of the more than two dozen routers The Wirecutter tested in the last two years.", "sentence_answer": "The Archer C7\u2019s exceptional performance on a 5 GHz signal is its strength."} +{"question": "Which band is recommended for stronger, faster wireless connection?", "paragraph": "The Archer C7\u2019s exceptional performance on a 5 GHz signal is its strength. Devices often had the same download speeds at long range as short range when connected to the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi. But at the longer distance, when switched to the Archer C7\u2019s 2.4GHz network, each device\u2019s download speeds dropped, sometimes by more than 80 percent. In summary: For a stronger, faster wireless connection, stay on the router\u2019s 5 GHz band for as long as you can. Older routers aren\u2019t the best at that; a newer router like TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7 is a much better option. Buying Advice The best router for most people is the Archer C7 ($100). It\u2019s a dual-band 802.11ac router, meaning it can run both 2.4GHz and 5 GHz Wi-Fi networks, and it supports the fastest Wi-Fi speeds of every wireless device you can buy, including the MacBook Pro, the Samsung Galaxy S6 or the brand-new iPhone 6s. The Archer C7 is faster over longer distances than most routers that cost $150 or more, and it\u2019s the best value of the more than two dozen routers The Wirecutter tested in the last two years.", "answer": "the router\u2019s 5 GHz band", "sentence": "In summary: For a stronger, faster wireless connection, stay on the router\u2019s 5 GHz band for as long as you can.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Archer C7\u2019s exceptional performance on a 5 GHz signal is its strength. Devices often had the same download speeds at long range as short range when connected to the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi. But at the longer distance, when switched to the Archer C7\u2019s 2.4GHz network, each device\u2019s download speeds dropped, sometimes by more than 80 percent. In summary: For a stronger, faster wireless connection, stay on the router\u2019s 5 GHz band for as long as you can. Older routers aren\u2019t the best at that; a newer router like TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7 is a much better option. Buying Advice The best router for most people is the Archer C7 ($100). It\u2019s a dual-band 802.11ac router, meaning it can run both 2.4GHz and 5 GHz Wi-Fi networks, and it supports the fastest Wi-Fi speeds of every wireless device you can buy, including the MacBook Pro, the Samsung Galaxy S6 or the brand-new iPhone 6s. The Archer C7 is faster over longer distances than most routers that cost $150 or more, and it\u2019s the best value of the more than two dozen routers The Wirecutter tested in the last two years.", "paragraph_answer": "The Archer C7\u2019s exceptional performance on a 5 GHz signal is its strength. Devices often had the same download speeds at long range as short range when connected to the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi. But at the longer distance, when switched to the Archer C7\u2019s 2.4GHz network, each device\u2019s download speeds dropped, sometimes by more than 80 percent. In summary: For a stronger, faster wireless connection, stay on the router\u2019s 5 GHz band for as long as you can. Older routers aren\u2019t the best at that; a newer router like TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7 is a much better option. Buying Advice The best router for most people is the Archer C7 ($100). It\u2019s a dual-band 802.11ac router, meaning it can run both 2.4GHz and 5 GHz Wi-Fi networks, and it supports the fastest Wi-Fi speeds of every wireless device you can buy, including the MacBook Pro, the Samsung Galaxy S6 or the brand-new iPhone 6s. The Archer C7 is faster over longer distances than most routers that cost $150 or more, and it\u2019s the best value of the more than two dozen routers The Wirecutter tested in the last two years.", "sentence_answer": "In summary: For a stronger, faster wireless connection, stay on the router\u2019s 5 GHz band for as long as you can."} +{"question": "How much does the Archer C7 cost?", "paragraph": "The Archer C7\u2019s exceptional performance on a 5 GHz signal is its strength. Devices often had the same download speeds at long range as short range when connected to the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi. But at the longer distance, when switched to the Archer C7\u2019s 2.4GHz network, each device\u2019s download speeds dropped, sometimes by more than 80 percent. In summary: For a stronger, faster wireless connection, stay on the router\u2019s 5 GHz band for as long as you can. Older routers aren\u2019t the best at that; a newer router like TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7 is a much better option. Buying Advice The best router for most people is the Archer C7 ($100). It\u2019s a dual-band 802.11ac router, meaning it can run both 2.4GHz and 5 GHz Wi-Fi networks, and it supports the fastest Wi-Fi speeds of every wireless device you can buy, including the MacBook Pro, the Samsung Galaxy S6 or the brand-new iPhone 6s. The Archer C7 is faster over longer distances than most routers that cost $150 or more, and it\u2019s the best value of the more than two dozen routers The Wirecutter tested in the last two years.", "answer": "$100", "sentence": "Buying Advice The best router for most people is the Archer C7 ( $100 ).", "paragraph_sentence": "The Archer C7\u2019s exceptional performance on a 5 GHz signal is its strength. Devices often had the same download speeds at long range as short range when connected to the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi. But at the longer distance, when switched to the Archer C7\u2019s 2.4GHz network, each device\u2019s download speeds dropped, sometimes by more than 80 percent. In summary: For a stronger, faster wireless connection, stay on the router\u2019s 5 GHz band for as long as you can. Older routers aren\u2019t the best at that; a newer router like TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7 is a much better option. Buying Advice The best router for most people is the Archer C7 ( $100 ). It\u2019s a dual-band 802.11ac router, meaning it can run both 2.4GHz and 5 GHz Wi-Fi networks, and it supports the fastest Wi-Fi speeds of every wireless device you can buy, including the MacBook Pro, the Samsung Galaxy S6 or the brand-new iPhone 6s. The Archer C7 is faster over longer distances than most routers that cost $150 or more, and it\u2019s the best value of the more than two dozen routers The Wirecutter tested in the last two years.", "paragraph_answer": "The Archer C7\u2019s exceptional performance on a 5 GHz signal is its strength. Devices often had the same download speeds at long range as short range when connected to the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi. But at the longer distance, when switched to the Archer C7\u2019s 2.4GHz network, each device\u2019s download speeds dropped, sometimes by more than 80 percent. In summary: For a stronger, faster wireless connection, stay on the router\u2019s 5 GHz band for as long as you can. Older routers aren\u2019t the best at that; a newer router like TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7 is a much better option. Buying Advice The best router for most people is the Archer C7 ( $100 ). It\u2019s a dual-band 802.11ac router, meaning it can run both 2.4GHz and 5 GHz Wi-Fi networks, and it supports the fastest Wi-Fi speeds of every wireless device you can buy, including the MacBook Pro, the Samsung Galaxy S6 or the brand-new iPhone 6s. The Archer C7 is faster over longer distances than most routers that cost $150 or more, and it\u2019s the best value of the more than two dozen routers The Wirecutter tested in the last two years.", "sentence_answer": "Buying Advice The best router for most people is the Archer C7 ( $100 )."} +{"question": "What is the best router for most people for buying purposes?", "paragraph": "The Archer C7\u2019s exceptional performance on a 5 GHz signal is its strength. Devices often had the same download speeds at long range as short range when connected to the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi. But at the longer distance, when switched to the Archer C7\u2019s 2.4GHz network, each device\u2019s download speeds dropped, sometimes by more than 80 percent. In summary: For a stronger, faster wireless connection, stay on the router\u2019s 5 GHz band for as long as you can. Older routers aren\u2019t the best at that; a newer router like TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7 is a much better option. Buying Advice The best router for most people is the Archer C7 ($100). It\u2019s a dual-band 802.11ac router, meaning it can run both 2.4GHz and 5 GHz Wi-Fi networks, and it supports the fastest Wi-Fi speeds of every wireless device you can buy, including the MacBook Pro, the Samsung Galaxy S6 or the brand-new iPhone 6s. The Archer C7 is faster over longer distances than most routers that cost $150 or more, and it\u2019s the best value of the more than two dozen routers The Wirecutter tested in the last two years.", "answer": "Archer C7", "sentence": "The Archer C7 \u2019s exceptional performance on a 5 GHz signal is its strength.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Archer C7 \u2019s exceptional performance on a 5 GHz signal is its strength. Devices often had the same download speeds at long range as short range when connected to the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi. But at the longer distance, when switched to the Archer C7\u2019s 2.4GHz network, each device\u2019s download speeds dropped, sometimes by more than 80 percent. In summary: For a stronger, faster wireless connection, stay on the router\u2019s 5 GHz band for as long as you can. Older routers aren\u2019t the best at that; a newer router like TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7 is a much better option. Buying Advice The best router for most people is the Archer C7 ($100). It\u2019s a dual-band 802.11ac router, meaning it can run both 2.4GHz and 5 GHz Wi-Fi networks, and it supports the fastest Wi-Fi speeds of every wireless device you can buy, including the MacBook Pro, the Samsung Galaxy S6 or the brand-new iPhone 6s. The Archer C7 is faster over longer distances than most routers that cost $150 or more, and it\u2019s the best value of the more than two dozen routers The Wirecutter tested in the last two years.", "paragraph_answer": "The Archer C7 \u2019s exceptional performance on a 5 GHz signal is its strength. Devices often had the same download speeds at long range as short range when connected to the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi. But at the longer distance, when switched to the Archer C7\u2019s 2.4GHz network, each device\u2019s download speeds dropped, sometimes by more than 80 percent. In summary: For a stronger, faster wireless connection, stay on the router\u2019s 5 GHz band for as long as you can. Older routers aren\u2019t the best at that; a newer router like TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7 is a much better option. Buying Advice The best router for most people is the Archer C7 ($100). It\u2019s a dual-band 802.11ac router, meaning it can run both 2.4GHz and 5 GHz Wi-Fi networks, and it supports the fastest Wi-Fi speeds of every wireless device you can buy, including the MacBook Pro, the Samsung Galaxy S6 or the brand-new iPhone 6s. The Archer C7 is faster over longer distances than most routers that cost $150 or more, and it\u2019s the best value of the more than two dozen routers The Wirecutter tested in the last two years.", "sentence_answer": "The Archer C7 \u2019s exceptional performance on a 5 GHz signal is its strength."} +{"question": "Which devices is the Archer C7 faster than over longer distances?", "paragraph": "The Archer C7\u2019s exceptional performance on a 5 GHz signal is its strength. Devices often had the same download speeds at long range as short range when connected to the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi. But at the longer distance, when switched to the Archer C7\u2019s 2.4GHz network, each device\u2019s download speeds dropped, sometimes by more than 80 percent. In summary: For a stronger, faster wireless connection, stay on the router\u2019s 5 GHz band for as long as you can. Older routers aren\u2019t the best at that; a newer router like TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7 is a much better option. Buying Advice The best router for most people is the Archer C7 ($100). It\u2019s a dual-band 802.11ac router, meaning it can run both 2.4GHz and 5 GHz Wi-Fi networks, and it supports the fastest Wi-Fi speeds of every wireless device you can buy, including the MacBook Pro, the Samsung Galaxy S6 or the brand-new iPhone 6s. The Archer C7 is faster over longer distances than most routers that cost $150 or more, and it\u2019s the best value of the more than two dozen routers The Wirecutter tested in the last two years.", "answer": "most routers that cost $150 or more", "sentence": "The Archer C7 is faster over longer distances than most routers that cost $150 or more , and it\u2019s the best value of the more than two dozen routers The Wirecutter tested in the last two years.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Archer C7\u2019s exceptional performance on a 5 GHz signal is its strength. Devices often had the same download speeds at long range as short range when connected to the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi. But at the longer distance, when switched to the Archer C7\u2019s 2.4GHz network, each device\u2019s download speeds dropped, sometimes by more than 80 percent. In summary: For a stronger, faster wireless connection, stay on the router\u2019s 5 GHz band for as long as you can. Older routers aren\u2019t the best at that; a newer router like TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7 is a much better option. Buying Advice The best router for most people is the Archer C7 ($100). It\u2019s a dual-band 802.11ac router, meaning it can run both 2.4GHz and 5 GHz Wi-Fi networks, and it supports the fastest Wi-Fi speeds of every wireless device you can buy, including the MacBook Pro, the Samsung Galaxy S6 or the brand-new iPhone 6s. The Archer C7 is faster over longer distances than most routers that cost $150 or more , and it\u2019s the best value of the more than two dozen routers The Wirecutter tested in the last two years. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Archer C7\u2019s exceptional performance on a 5 GHz signal is its strength. Devices often had the same download speeds at long range as short range when connected to the Archer C7\u2019s 5 GHz Wi-Fi. But at the longer distance, when switched to the Archer C7\u2019s 2.4GHz network, each device\u2019s download speeds dropped, sometimes by more than 80 percent. In summary: For a stronger, faster wireless connection, stay on the router\u2019s 5 GHz band for as long as you can. Older routers aren\u2019t the best at that; a newer router like TP-Link\u2019s Archer C7 is a much better option. Buying Advice The best router for most people is the Archer C7 ($100). It\u2019s a dual-band 802.11ac router, meaning it can run both 2.4GHz and 5 GHz Wi-Fi networks, and it supports the fastest Wi-Fi speeds of every wireless device you can buy, including the MacBook Pro, the Samsung Galaxy S6 or the brand-new iPhone 6s. The Archer C7 is faster over longer distances than most routers that cost $150 or more , and it\u2019s the best value of the more than two dozen routers The Wirecutter tested in the last two years.", "sentence_answer": "The Archer C7 is faster over longer distances than most routers that cost $150 or more , and it\u2019s the best value of the more than two dozen routers The Wirecutter tested in the last two years."} +{"question": "What did The Wirecutter comb through?", "paragraph": "The Archer C7 isn\u2019t for everyone. So The Wirecutter also combed through test results and picked some routers for different living situations, such as small apartments or homes where people primarily use Apple devices. Generally, we recommend you upgrade to a new router every three to four years. That accounts for how often people typically upgrade devices like smartphones (every two years) and computers (every three to four years). Yet whether your smartphones, computers and tablets are one, two or five years old, now is a good time to buy a new router if you haven\u2019t in the last three years. Newer devices are probably using the 802.11ac standard, so you will get the fastest speeds at long distances with an 802.11ac router. If you hoard old devices, you will also get faster speeds and greater range. These benefits will be especially clear if you stay on a 5 GHz Wi-Fi network for as long as you can.", "answer": "test results", "sentence": "So The Wirecutter also combed through test results and picked some routers for different living situations, such as small apartments or homes where people primarily use Apple devices.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Archer C7 isn\u2019t for everyone. So The Wirecutter also combed through test results and picked some routers for different living situations, such as small apartments or homes where people primarily use Apple devices. Generally, we recommend you upgrade to a new router every three to four years. That accounts for how often people typically upgrade devices like smartphones (every two years) and computers (every three to four years). Yet whether your smartphones, computers and tablets are one, two or five years old, now is a good time to buy a new router if you haven\u2019t in the last three years. Newer devices are probably using the 802.11ac standard, so you will get the fastest speeds at long distances with an 802.11ac router. If you hoard old devices, you will also get faster speeds and greater range. These benefits will be especially clear if you stay on a 5 GHz Wi-Fi network for as long as you can.", "paragraph_answer": "The Archer C7 isn\u2019t for everyone. So The Wirecutter also combed through test results and picked some routers for different living situations, such as small apartments or homes where people primarily use Apple devices. Generally, we recommend you upgrade to a new router every three to four years. That accounts for how often people typically upgrade devices like smartphones (every two years) and computers (every three to four years). Yet whether your smartphones, computers and tablets are one, two or five years old, now is a good time to buy a new router if you haven\u2019t in the last three years. Newer devices are probably using the 802.11ac standard, so you will get the fastest speeds at long distances with an 802.11ac router. If you hoard old devices, you will also get faster speeds and greater range. These benefits will be especially clear if you stay on a 5 GHz Wi-Fi network for as long as you can.", "sentence_answer": "So The Wirecutter also combed through test results and picked some routers for different living situations, such as small apartments or homes where people primarily use Apple devices."} +{"question": "When is a good time to buy a new router if you haven't in the last three years?", "paragraph": "The Archer C7 isn\u2019t for everyone. So The Wirecutter also combed through test results and picked some routers for different living situations, such as small apartments or homes where people primarily use Apple devices. Generally, we recommend you upgrade to a new router every three to four years. That accounts for how often people typically upgrade devices like smartphones (every two years) and computers (every three to four years). Yet whether your smartphones, computers and tablets are one, two or five years old, now is a good time to buy a new router if you haven\u2019t in the last three years. Newer devices are probably using the 802.11ac standard, so you will get the fastest speeds at long distances with an 802.11ac router. If you hoard old devices, you will also get faster speeds and greater range. These benefits will be especially clear if you stay on a 5 GHz Wi-Fi network for as long as you can.", "answer": "now", "sentence": "Yet whether your smartphones, computers and tablets are one, two or five years old, now is a good time to buy a new router if you haven\u2019t in the last three years.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Archer C7 isn\u2019t for everyone. So The Wirecutter also combed through test results and picked some routers for different living situations, such as small apartments or homes where people primarily use Apple devices. Generally, we recommend you upgrade to a new router every three to four years. That accounts for how often people typically upgrade devices like smartphones (every two years) and computers (every three to four years). Yet whether your smartphones, computers and tablets are one, two or five years old, now is a good time to buy a new router if you haven\u2019t in the last three years. Newer devices are probably using the 802.11ac standard, so you will get the fastest speeds at long distances with an 802.11ac router. If you hoard old devices, you will also get faster speeds and greater range. These benefits will be especially clear if you stay on a 5 GHz Wi-Fi network for as long as you can.", "paragraph_answer": "The Archer C7 isn\u2019t for everyone. So The Wirecutter also combed through test results and picked some routers for different living situations, such as small apartments or homes where people primarily use Apple devices. Generally, we recommend you upgrade to a new router every three to four years. That accounts for how often people typically upgrade devices like smartphones (every two years) and computers (every three to four years). Yet whether your smartphones, computers and tablets are one, two or five years old, now is a good time to buy a new router if you haven\u2019t in the last three years. Newer devices are probably using the 802.11ac standard, so you will get the fastest speeds at long distances with an 802.11ac router. If you hoard old devices, you will also get faster speeds and greater range. These benefits will be especially clear if you stay on a 5 GHz Wi-Fi network for as long as you can.", "sentence_answer": "Yet whether your smartphones, computers and tablets are one, two or five years old, now is a good time to buy a new router if you haven\u2019t in the last three years."} +{"question": "How often is it recommended to upgrade to a new router?", "paragraph": "The Archer C7 isn\u2019t for everyone. So The Wirecutter also combed through test results and picked some routers for different living situations, such as small apartments or homes where people primarily use Apple devices. Generally, we recommend you upgrade to a new router every three to four years. That accounts for how often people typically upgrade devices like smartphones (every two years) and computers (every three to four years). Yet whether your smartphones, computers and tablets are one, two or five years old, now is a good time to buy a new router if you haven\u2019t in the last three years. Newer devices are probably using the 802.11ac standard, so you will get the fastest speeds at long distances with an 802.11ac router. If you hoard old devices, you will also get faster speeds and greater range. These benefits will be especially clear if you stay on a 5 GHz Wi-Fi network for as long as you can.", "answer": "three to four years", "sentence": "every three to four years .", "paragraph_sentence": "The Archer C7 isn\u2019t for everyone. So The Wirecutter also combed through test results and picked some routers for different living situations, such as small apartments or homes where people primarily use Apple devices. Generally, we recommend you upgrade to a new router every three to four years . That accounts for how often people typically upgrade devices like smartphones (every two years) and computers (every three to four years). Yet whether your smartphones, computers and tablets are one, two or five years old, now is a good time to buy a new router if you haven\u2019t in the last three years. Newer devices are probably using the 802.11ac standard, so you will get the fastest speeds at long distances with an 802.11ac router. If you hoard old devices, you will also get faster speeds and greater range. These benefits will be especially clear if you stay on a 5 GHz Wi-Fi network for as long as you can.", "paragraph_answer": "The Archer C7 isn\u2019t for everyone. So The Wirecutter also combed through test results and picked some routers for different living situations, such as small apartments or homes where people primarily use Apple devices. Generally, we recommend you upgrade to a new router every three to four years . That accounts for how often people typically upgrade devices like smartphones (every two years) and computers (every three to four years). Yet whether your smartphones, computers and tablets are one, two or five years old, now is a good time to buy a new router if you haven\u2019t in the last three years. Newer devices are probably using the 802.11ac standard, so you will get the fastest speeds at long distances with an 802.11ac router. If you hoard old devices, you will also get faster speeds and greater range. These benefits will be especially clear if you stay on a 5 GHz Wi-Fi network for as long as you can.", "sentence_answer": "every three to four years ."} +{"question": "What is the advantage of using the latest 802.11ac standard?", "paragraph": "The Archer C7 isn\u2019t for everyone. So The Wirecutter also combed through test results and picked some routers for different living situations, such as small apartments or homes where people primarily use Apple devices. Generally, we recommend you upgrade to a new router every three to four years. That accounts for how often people typically upgrade devices like smartphones (every two years) and computers (every three to four years). Yet whether your smartphones, computers and tablets are one, two or five years old, now is a good time to buy a new router if you haven\u2019t in the last three years. Newer devices are probably using the 802.11ac standard, so you will get the fastest speeds at long distances with an 802.11ac router. If you hoard old devices, you will also get faster speeds and greater range. These benefits will be especially clear if you stay on a 5 GHz Wi-Fi network for as long as you can.", "answer": "the fastest speeds at long distances", "sentence": "Newer devices are probably using the 802.11ac standard, so you will get the fastest speeds at long distances with an 802.11ac router.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Archer C7 isn\u2019t for everyone. So The Wirecutter also combed through test results and picked some routers for different living situations, such as small apartments or homes where people primarily use Apple devices. Generally, we recommend you upgrade to a new router every three to four years. That accounts for how often people typically upgrade devices like smartphones (every two years) and computers (every three to four years). Yet whether your smartphones, computers and tablets are one, two or five years old, now is a good time to buy a new router if you haven\u2019t in the last three years. Newer devices are probably using the 802.11ac standard, so you will get the fastest speeds at long distances with an 802.11ac router. If you hoard old devices, you will also get faster speeds and greater range. These benefits will be especially clear if you stay on a 5 GHz Wi-Fi network for as long as you can.", "paragraph_answer": "The Archer C7 isn\u2019t for everyone. So The Wirecutter also combed through test results and picked some routers for different living situations, such as small apartments or homes where people primarily use Apple devices. Generally, we recommend you upgrade to a new router every three to four years. That accounts for how often people typically upgrade devices like smartphones (every two years) and computers (every three to four years). Yet whether your smartphones, computers and tablets are one, two or five years old, now is a good time to buy a new router if you haven\u2019t in the last three years. Newer devices are probably using the 802.11ac standard, so you will get the fastest speeds at long distances with an 802.11ac router. If you hoard old devices, you will also get faster speeds and greater range. These benefits will be especially clear if you stay on a 5 GHz Wi-Fi network for as long as you can.", "sentence_answer": "Newer devices are probably using the 802.11ac standard, so you will get the fastest speeds at long distances with an 802.11ac router."} +{"question": "What's the caveat?", "paragraph": "One caveat: If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years. A newer router can still be useful because of the improved wireless range, but you won\u2019t experience a big difference in speeds. If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender, which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage. Powerline networking, which converts a house\u2019s electrical wiring into a wired Internet connection, is another option, but you\u2019ll have to check if your home supports it. As for Mr. McConnell, the retired engineer eventually solved his Wi-Fi headache by setting up his devices to stay on the 5 GHz radio band. To get a Wi-Fi signal to his iPad in the bedroom, he also set up an extender. Now everything is smooth sailing, he said. \u201cI\u2019ve got my life back,\u201d he said.", "answer": "If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years", "sentence": "One caveat: If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years .", "paragraph_sentence": " One caveat: If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years . A newer router can still be useful because of the improved wireless range, but you won\u2019t experience a big difference in speeds. If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender, which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage. Powerline networking, which converts a house\u2019s electrical wiring into a wired Internet connection, is another option, but you\u2019ll have to check if your home supports it. As for Mr. McConnell, the retired engineer eventually solved his Wi-Fi headache by setting up his devices to stay on the 5 GHz radio band. To get a Wi-Fi signal to his iPad in the bedroom, he also set up an extender. Now everything is smooth sailing, he said. \u201cI\u2019ve got my life back,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "One caveat: If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years . A newer router can still be useful because of the improved wireless range, but you won\u2019t experience a big difference in speeds. If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender, which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage. Powerline networking, which converts a house\u2019s electrical wiring into a wired Internet connection, is another option, but you\u2019ll have to check if your home supports it. As for Mr. McConnell, the retired engineer eventually solved his Wi-Fi headache by setting up his devices to stay on the 5 GHz radio band. To get a Wi-Fi signal to his iPad in the bedroom, he also set up an extender. Now everything is smooth sailing, he said. \u201cI\u2019ve got my life back,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "One caveat: If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years ."} +{"question": "Why can a newer router still be useful?", "paragraph": "One caveat: If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years. A newer router can still be useful because of the improved wireless range, but you won\u2019t experience a big difference in speeds. If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender, which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage. Powerline networking, which converts a house\u2019s electrical wiring into a wired Internet connection, is another option, but you\u2019ll have to check if your home supports it. As for Mr. McConnell, the retired engineer eventually solved his Wi-Fi headache by setting up his devices to stay on the 5 GHz radio band. To get a Wi-Fi signal to his iPad in the bedroom, he also set up an extender. Now everything is smooth sailing, he said. \u201cI\u2019ve got my life back,\u201d he said.", "answer": "because of the improved wireless range", "sentence": "A newer router can still be useful because of the improved wireless range , but you won\u2019t experience a big difference in speeds.", "paragraph_sentence": "One caveat: If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years. A newer router can still be useful because of the improved wireless range , but you won\u2019t experience a big difference in speeds. If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender, which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage. Powerline networking, which converts a house\u2019s electrical wiring into a wired Internet connection, is another option, but you\u2019ll have to check if your home supports it. As for Mr. McConnell, the retired engineer eventually solved his Wi-Fi headache by setting up his devices to stay on the 5 GHz radio band. To get a Wi-Fi signal to his iPad in the bedroom, he also set up an extender. Now everything is smooth sailing, he said. \u201cI\u2019ve got my life back,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "One caveat: If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years. A newer router can still be useful because of the improved wireless range , but you won\u2019t experience a big difference in speeds. If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender, which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage. Powerline networking, which converts a house\u2019s electrical wiring into a wired Internet connection, is another option, but you\u2019ll have to check if your home supports it. As for Mr. McConnell, the retired engineer eventually solved his Wi-Fi headache by setting up his devices to stay on the 5 GHz radio band. To get a Wi-Fi signal to his iPad in the bedroom, he also set up an extender. Now everything is smooth sailing, he said. \u201cI\u2019ve got my life back,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "A newer router can still be useful because of the improved wireless range , but you won\u2019t experience a big difference in speeds."} +{"question": "What can you do if your house is so large that a new router can't cover it?", "paragraph": "One caveat: If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years. A newer router can still be useful because of the improved wireless range, but you won\u2019t experience a big difference in speeds. If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender, which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage. Powerline networking, which converts a house\u2019s electrical wiring into a wired Internet connection, is another option, but you\u2019ll have to check if your home supports it. As for Mr. McConnell, the retired engineer eventually solved his Wi-Fi headache by setting up his devices to stay on the 5 GHz radio band. To get a Wi-Fi signal to his iPad in the bedroom, he also set up an extender. Now everything is smooth sailing, he said. \u201cI\u2019ve got my life back,\u201d he said.", "answer": "you could install a Wi-Fi extender", "sentence": "If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender , which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage.", "paragraph_sentence": "One caveat: If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years. A newer router can still be useful because of the improved wireless range, but you won\u2019t experience a big difference in speeds. If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender , which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage. Powerline networking, which converts a house\u2019s electrical wiring into a wired Internet connection, is another option, but you\u2019ll have to check if your home supports it. As for Mr. McConnell, the retired engineer eventually solved his Wi-Fi headache by setting up his devices to stay on the 5 GHz radio band. To get a Wi-Fi signal to his iPad in the bedroom, he also set up an extender. Now everything is smooth sailing, he said. \u201cI\u2019ve got my life back,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "One caveat: If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years. A newer router can still be useful because of the improved wireless range, but you won\u2019t experience a big difference in speeds. If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender , which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage. Powerline networking, which converts a house\u2019s electrical wiring into a wired Internet connection, is another option, but you\u2019ll have to check if your home supports it. As for Mr. McConnell, the retired engineer eventually solved his Wi-Fi headache by setting up his devices to stay on the 5 GHz radio band. To get a Wi-Fi signal to his iPad in the bedroom, he also set up an extender. Now everything is smooth sailing, he said. \u201cI\u2019ve got my life back,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender , which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage."} +{"question": "What does a Wi-Fi extender do?", "paragraph": "One caveat: If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years. A newer router can still be useful because of the improved wireless range, but you won\u2019t experience a big difference in speeds. If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender, which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage. Powerline networking, which converts a house\u2019s electrical wiring into a wired Internet connection, is another option, but you\u2019ll have to check if your home supports it. As for Mr. McConnell, the retired engineer eventually solved his Wi-Fi headache by setting up his devices to stay on the 5 GHz radio band. To get a Wi-Fi signal to his iPad in the bedroom, he also set up an extender. Now everything is smooth sailing, he said. \u201cI\u2019ve got my life back,\u201d he said.", "answer": "enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage", "sentence": "If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender, which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage .", "paragraph_sentence": "One caveat: If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years. A newer router can still be useful because of the improved wireless range, but you won\u2019t experience a big difference in speeds. If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender, which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage . Powerline networking, which converts a house\u2019s electrical wiring into a wired Internet connection, is another option, but you\u2019ll have to check if your home supports it. As for Mr. McConnell, the retired engineer eventually solved his Wi-Fi headache by setting up his devices to stay on the 5 GHz radio band. To get a Wi-Fi signal to his iPad in the bedroom, he also set up an extender. Now everything is smooth sailing, he said. \u201cI\u2019ve got my life back,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "One caveat: If you use a slower Internet service like DSL, you can probably hold on to a router for longer than three years. A newer router can still be useful because of the improved wireless range, but you won\u2019t experience a big difference in speeds. If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender, which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage . Powerline networking, which converts a house\u2019s electrical wiring into a wired Internet connection, is another option, but you\u2019ll have to check if your home supports it. As for Mr. McConnell, the retired engineer eventually solved his Wi-Fi headache by setting up his devices to stay on the 5 GHz radio band. To get a Wi-Fi signal to his iPad in the bedroom, he also set up an extender. Now everything is smooth sailing, he said. \u201cI\u2019ve got my life back,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "If your house is so large that a new router won\u2019t be able to cover every inch with a great Wi-Fi signal, you could install a Wi-Fi extender, which enhances an existing Wi-Fi connection to increase coverage ."} +{"question": "Who did Pekka Rinne make 19 saves for?", "paragraph": "Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators, who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss. Nashville has not scored in a franchise-record 213 minutes 47 seconds, since Miikka Salmomaki\u2019s goal at 6:13 of the second period in a 3-2 win over Anaheim last Tuesday. Nashville outshot the Rangers by 14-3 in a scoreless first period. The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties. Still, the Predators were stymied by an aggressive Lundqvist, who challenged Nashville\u2019s shooters throughout. Lundqvist\u2019s play kept the Rangers in the game, and Nash\u2019s sixth goal of the season at 4:32 of the second period gave them the lead. The goal was Nash\u2019s fourth in the Rangers\u2019 past two games. BRUINS 4, MAPLE LEAFS 3 David Krejci scored the only goal in a shootout and Patrice Bergeron extended his point streak to eight games as Boston won in Toronto to sweep a home-and-home series.", "answer": "the Predators", "sentence": "Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators , who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss.", "paragraph_sentence": " Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators , who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss. Nashville has not scored in a franchise-record 213 minutes 47 seconds, since Miikka Salmomaki\u2019s goal at 6:13 of the second period in a 3-2 win over Anaheim last Tuesday. Nashville outshot the Rangers by 14-3 in a scoreless first period. The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties. Still, the Predators were stymied by an aggressive Lundqvist, who challenged Nashville\u2019s shooters throughout. Lundqvist\u2019s play kept the Rangers in the game, and Nash\u2019s sixth goal of the season at 4:32 of the second period gave them the lead. The goal was Nash\u2019s fourth in the Rangers\u2019 past two games. BRUINS 4, MAPLE LEAFS 3 David Krejci scored the only goal in a shootout and Patrice Bergeron extended his point streak to eight games as Boston won in Toronto to sweep a home-and-home series.", "paragraph_answer": "Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators , who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss. Nashville has not scored in a franchise-record 213 minutes 47 seconds, since Miikka Salmomaki\u2019s goal at 6:13 of the second period in a 3-2 win over Anaheim last Tuesday. Nashville outshot the Rangers by 14-3 in a scoreless first period. The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties. Still, the Predators were stymied by an aggressive Lundqvist, who challenged Nashville\u2019s shooters throughout. Lundqvist\u2019s play kept the Rangers in the game, and Nash\u2019s sixth goal of the season at 4:32 of the second period gave them the lead. The goal was Nash\u2019s fourth in the Rangers\u2019 past two games. BRUINS 4, MAPLE LEAFS 3 David Krejci scored the only goal in a shootout and Patrice Bergeron extended his point streak to eight games as Boston won in Toronto to sweep a home-and-home series.", "sentence_answer": "Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators , who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss."} +{"question": "Who made 19 saves for the Predators?", "paragraph": "Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators, who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss. Nashville has not scored in a franchise-record 213 minutes 47 seconds, since Miikka Salmomaki\u2019s goal at 6:13 of the second period in a 3-2 win over Anaheim last Tuesday. Nashville outshot the Rangers by 14-3 in a scoreless first period. The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties. Still, the Predators were stymied by an aggressive Lundqvist, who challenged Nashville\u2019s shooters throughout. Lundqvist\u2019s play kept the Rangers in the game, and Nash\u2019s sixth goal of the season at 4:32 of the second period gave them the lead. The goal was Nash\u2019s fourth in the Rangers\u2019 past two games. BRUINS 4, MAPLE LEAFS 3 David Krejci scored the only goal in a shootout and Patrice Bergeron extended his point streak to eight games as Boston won in Toronto to sweep a home-and-home series.", "answer": "Pekka Rinne", "sentence": "Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators, who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss.", "paragraph_sentence": " Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators, who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss. Nashville has not scored in a franchise-record 213 minutes 47 seconds, since Miikka Salmomaki\u2019s goal at 6:13 of the second period in a 3-2 win over Anaheim last Tuesday. Nashville outshot the Rangers by 14-3 in a scoreless first period. The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties. Still, the Predators were stymied by an aggressive Lundqvist, who challenged Nashville\u2019s shooters throughout. Lundqvist\u2019s play kept the Rangers in the game, and Nash\u2019s sixth goal of the season at 4:32 of the second period gave them the lead. The goal was Nash\u2019s fourth in the Rangers\u2019 past two games. BRUINS 4, MAPLE LEAFS 3 David Krejci scored the only goal in a shootout and Patrice Bergeron extended his point streak to eight games as Boston won in Toronto to sweep a home-and-home series.", "paragraph_answer": " Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators, who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss. Nashville has not scored in a franchise-record 213 minutes 47 seconds, since Miikka Salmomaki\u2019s goal at 6:13 of the second period in a 3-2 win over Anaheim last Tuesday. Nashville outshot the Rangers by 14-3 in a scoreless first period. The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties. Still, the Predators were stymied by an aggressive Lundqvist, who challenged Nashville\u2019s shooters throughout. Lundqvist\u2019s play kept the Rangers in the game, and Nash\u2019s sixth goal of the season at 4:32 of the second period gave them the lead. The goal was Nash\u2019s fourth in the Rangers\u2019 past two games. BRUINS 4, MAPLE LEAFS 3 David Krejci scored the only goal in a shootout and Patrice Bergeron extended his point streak to eight games as Boston won in Toronto to sweep a home-and-home series.", "sentence_answer": " Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators, who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss."} +{"question": "Who did Nashville outshoot by 14-3", "paragraph": "Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators, who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss. Nashville has not scored in a franchise-record 213 minutes 47 seconds, since Miikka Salmomaki\u2019s goal at 6:13 of the second period in a 3-2 win over Anaheim last Tuesday. Nashville outshot the Rangers by 14-3 in a scoreless first period. The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties. Still, the Predators were stymied by an aggressive Lundqvist, who challenged Nashville\u2019s shooters throughout. Lundqvist\u2019s play kept the Rangers in the game, and Nash\u2019s sixth goal of the season at 4:32 of the second period gave them the lead. The goal was Nash\u2019s fourth in the Rangers\u2019 past two games. BRUINS 4, MAPLE LEAFS 3 David Krejci scored the only goal in a shootout and Patrice Bergeron extended his point streak to eight games as Boston won in Toronto to sweep a home-and-home series.", "answer": "the Rangers", "sentence": "Nashville outshot the Rangers by 14-3 in a scoreless first period.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators, who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss. Nashville has not scored in a franchise-record 213 minutes 47 seconds, since Miikka Salmomaki\u2019s goal at 6:13 of the second period in a 3-2 win over Anaheim last Tuesday. Nashville outshot the Rangers by 14-3 in a scoreless first period. The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties. Still, the Predators were stymied by an aggressive Lundqvist, who challenged Nashville\u2019s shooters throughout. Lundqvist\u2019s play kept the Rangers in the game, and Nash\u2019s sixth goal of the season at 4:32 of the second period gave them the lead. The goal was Nash\u2019s fourth in the Rangers\u2019 past two games. BRUINS 4, MAPLE LEAFS 3 David Krejci scored the only goal in a shootout and Patrice Bergeron extended his point streak to eight games as Boston won in Toronto to sweep a home-and-home series.", "paragraph_answer": "Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators, who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss. Nashville has not scored in a franchise-record 213 minutes 47 seconds, since Miikka Salmomaki\u2019s goal at 6:13 of the second period in a 3-2 win over Anaheim last Tuesday. Nashville outshot the Rangers by 14-3 in a scoreless first period. The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties. Still, the Predators were stymied by an aggressive Lundqvist, who challenged Nashville\u2019s shooters throughout. Lundqvist\u2019s play kept the Rangers in the game, and Nash\u2019s sixth goal of the season at 4:32 of the second period gave them the lead. The goal was Nash\u2019s fourth in the Rangers\u2019 past two games. BRUINS 4, MAPLE LEAFS 3 David Krejci scored the only goal in a shootout and Patrice Bergeron extended his point streak to eight games as Boston won in Toronto to sweep a home-and-home series.", "sentence_answer": "Nashville outshot the Rangers by 14-3 in a scoreless first period."} +{"question": "Who played interference?", "paragraph": "Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators, who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss. Nashville has not scored in a franchise-record 213 minutes 47 seconds, since Miikka Salmomaki\u2019s goal at 6:13 of the second period in a 3-2 win over Anaheim last Tuesday. Nashville outshot the Rangers by 14-3 in a scoreless first period. The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties. Still, the Predators were stymied by an aggressive Lundqvist, who challenged Nashville\u2019s shooters throughout. Lundqvist\u2019s play kept the Rangers in the game, and Nash\u2019s sixth goal of the season at 4:32 of the second period gave them the lead. The goal was Nash\u2019s fourth in the Rangers\u2019 past two games. BRUINS 4, MAPLE LEAFS 3 David Krejci scored the only goal in a shootout and Patrice Bergeron extended his point streak to eight games as Boston won in Toronto to sweep a home-and-home series.", "answer": "Dan Girardi", "sentence": "The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators, who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss. Nashville has not scored in a franchise-record 213 minutes 47 seconds, since Miikka Salmomaki\u2019s goal at 6:13 of the second period in a 3-2 win over Anaheim last Tuesday. Nashville outshot the Rangers by 14-3 in a scoreless first period. The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties. Still, the Predators were stymied by an aggressive Lundqvist, who challenged Nashville\u2019s shooters throughout. Lundqvist\u2019s play kept the Rangers in the game, and Nash\u2019s sixth goal of the season at 4:32 of the second period gave them the lead. The goal was Nash\u2019s fourth in the Rangers\u2019 past two games. BRUINS 4, MAPLE LEAFS 3 David Krejci scored the only goal in a shootout and Patrice Bergeron extended his point streak to eight games as Boston won in Toronto to sweep a home-and-home series.", "paragraph_answer": "Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators, who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss. Nashville has not scored in a franchise-record 213 minutes 47 seconds, since Miikka Salmomaki\u2019s goal at 6:13 of the second period in a 3-2 win over Anaheim last Tuesday. Nashville outshot the Rangers by 14-3 in a scoreless first period. The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties. Still, the Predators were stymied by an aggressive Lundqvist, who challenged Nashville\u2019s shooters throughout. Lundqvist\u2019s play kept the Rangers in the game, and Nash\u2019s sixth goal of the season at 4:32 of the second period gave them the lead. The goal was Nash\u2019s fourth in the Rangers\u2019 past two games. BRUINS 4, MAPLE LEAFS 3 David Krejci scored the only goal in a shootout and Patrice Bergeron extended his point streak to eight games as Boston won in Toronto to sweep a home-and-home series.", "sentence_answer": "The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties."} +{"question": "Who played holding?", "paragraph": "Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators, who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss. Nashville has not scored in a franchise-record 213 minutes 47 seconds, since Miikka Salmomaki\u2019s goal at 6:13 of the second period in a 3-2 win over Anaheim last Tuesday. Nashville outshot the Rangers by 14-3 in a scoreless first period. The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties. Still, the Predators were stymied by an aggressive Lundqvist, who challenged Nashville\u2019s shooters throughout. Lundqvist\u2019s play kept the Rangers in the game, and Nash\u2019s sixth goal of the season at 4:32 of the second period gave them the lead. The goal was Nash\u2019s fourth in the Rangers\u2019 past two games. BRUINS 4, MAPLE LEAFS 3 David Krejci scored the only goal in a shootout and Patrice Bergeron extended his point streak to eight games as Boston won in Toronto to sweep a home-and-home series.", "answer": "Keith Yandle", "sentence": "The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators, who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss. Nashville has not scored in a franchise-record 213 minutes 47 seconds, since Miikka Salmomaki\u2019s goal at 6:13 of the second period in a 3-2 win over Anaheim last Tuesday. Nashville outshot the Rangers by 14-3 in a scoreless first period. The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties. Still, the Predators were stymied by an aggressive Lundqvist, who challenged Nashville\u2019s shooters throughout. Lundqvist\u2019s play kept the Rangers in the game, and Nash\u2019s sixth goal of the season at 4:32 of the second period gave them the lead. The goal was Nash\u2019s fourth in the Rangers\u2019 past two games. BRUINS 4, MAPLE LEAFS 3 David Krejci scored the only goal in a shootout and Patrice Bergeron extended his point streak to eight games as Boston won in Toronto to sweep a home-and-home series.", "paragraph_answer": "Pekka Rinne made 19 saves for the Predators, who fell to 11-6-3 with their third straight shutout loss. Nashville has not scored in a franchise-record 213 minutes 47 seconds, since Miikka Salmomaki\u2019s goal at 6:13 of the second period in a 3-2 win over Anaheim last Tuesday. Nashville outshot the Rangers by 14-3 in a scoreless first period. The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties. Still, the Predators were stymied by an aggressive Lundqvist, who challenged Nashville\u2019s shooters throughout. Lundqvist\u2019s play kept the Rangers in the game, and Nash\u2019s sixth goal of the season at 4:32 of the second period gave them the lead. The goal was Nash\u2019s fourth in the Rangers\u2019 past two games. BRUINS 4, MAPLE LEAFS 3 David Krejci scored the only goal in a shootout and Patrice Bergeron extended his point streak to eight games as Boston won in Toronto to sweep a home-and-home series.", "sentence_answer": "The Predators spent 7:21 on the power play, as Dan Girardi (interference), Keith Yandle (holding) and Stepan (double-minor for high-sticking) committed penalties."} +{"question": "Who had goals in regulation for the Flyers?", "paragraph": "Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers, who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game. BLUES 2, SABRES 1 Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and St. Louis came back to win in Buffalo. Jake Allen made 24 saves in the win, the Blues\u2019 second against Buffalo in the last week. KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida.", "answer": "Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux", "sentence": "Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers, who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game.", "paragraph_sentence": " Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers, who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game. BLUES 2, SABRES 1 Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and St. Louis came back to win in Buffalo. Jake Allen made 24 saves in the win, the Blues\u2019 second against Buffalo in the last week. KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida.", "paragraph_answer": " Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers, who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game. BLUES 2, SABRES 1 Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and St. Louis came back to win in Buffalo. Jake Allen made 24 saves in the win, the Blues\u2019 second against Buffalo in the last week. KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida.", "sentence_answer": " Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers, who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game."} +{"question": "Who was shut out in the previous two games?", "paragraph": "Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers, who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game. BLUES 2, SABRES 1 Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and St. Louis came back to win in Buffalo. Jake Allen made 24 saves in the win, the Blues\u2019 second against Buffalo in the last week. KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida.", "answer": "Flyers", "sentence": "Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers , who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game.", "paragraph_sentence": " Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers , who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game. BLUES 2, SABRES 1 Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and St. Louis came back to win in Buffalo. Jake Allen made 24 saves in the win, the Blues\u2019 second against Buffalo in the last week. KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida.", "paragraph_answer": "Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers , who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game. BLUES 2, SABRES 1 Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and St. Louis came back to win in Buffalo. Jake Allen made 24 saves in the win, the Blues\u2019 second against Buffalo in the last week. KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida.", "sentence_answer": "Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers , who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game."} +{"question": "What were the Flyers average goals per game?", "paragraph": "Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers, who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game. BLUES 2, SABRES 1 Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and St. Louis came back to win in Buffalo. Jake Allen made 24 saves in the win, the Blues\u2019 second against Buffalo in the last week. KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida.", "answer": "1.70", "sentence": "Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers, who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game.", "paragraph_sentence": " Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers, who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game. BLUES 2, SABRES 1 Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and St. Louis came back to win in Buffalo. Jake Allen made 24 saves in the win, the Blues\u2019 second against Buffalo in the last week. KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida.", "paragraph_answer": "Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers, who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game. BLUES 2, SABRES 1 Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and St. Louis came back to win in Buffalo. Jake Allen made 24 saves in the win, the Blues\u2019 second against Buffalo in the last week. KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida.", "sentence_answer": "Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers, who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game."} +{"question": "Who scored third period goals?", "paragraph": "Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers, who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game. BLUES 2, SABRES 1 Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and St. Louis came back to win in Buffalo. Jake Allen made 24 saves in the win, the Blues\u2019 second against Buffalo in the last week. KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida.", "answer": "Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri", "sentence": "BLUES 2, SABRES 1 Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and St. Louis came back to win in Buffalo.", "paragraph_sentence": "Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers, who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game. BLUES 2, SABRES 1 Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and St. Louis came back to win in Buffalo. Jake Allen made 24 saves in the win, the Blues\u2019 second against Buffalo in the last week. KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida.", "paragraph_answer": "Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers, who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game. BLUES 2, SABRES 1 Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and St. Louis came back to win in Buffalo. Jake Allen made 24 saves in the win, the Blues\u2019 second against Buffalo in the last week. KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida.", "sentence_answer": "BLUES 2, SABRES 1 Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and St. Louis came back to win in Buffalo."} +{"question": "Who bounced back from a poor performance?", "paragraph": "Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers, who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game. BLUES 2, SABRES 1 Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and St. Louis came back to win in Buffalo. Jake Allen made 24 saves in the win, the Blues\u2019 second against Buffalo in the last week. KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida.", "answer": "Jonathan Quick", "sentence": "KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida.", "paragraph_sentence": "Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers, who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game. BLUES 2, SABRES 1 Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and St. Louis came back to win in Buffalo. Jake Allen made 24 saves in the win, the Blues\u2019 second against Buffalo in the last week. KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida. ", "paragraph_answer": "Brayden Schenn and Claude Giroux had goals in regulation for the host Flyers, who were shut out in the previous two games and entered averaging an N.H.L.-worst 1.70 goals per game. BLUES 2, SABRES 1 Troy Brouwer and Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and St. Louis came back to win in Buffalo. Jake Allen made 24 saves in the win, the Blues\u2019 second against Buffalo in the last week. KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida.", "sentence_answer": "KINGS 3, PANTHERS 1 Jonathan Quick bounced back from a poor performance and Alec Martinez scored the go-ahead goal late in the second period to lift Los Angeles over Florida."} +{"question": "Who stopped 31 shots?", "paragraph": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "answer": "Quick", "sentence": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots.", "paragraph_sentence": " Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "paragraph_answer": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "sentence_answer": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots."} +{"question": "Who scored the tie breaking goal", "paragraph": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "answer": "Cody McLeod", "sentence": "AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg.", "paragraph_sentence": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "paragraph_answer": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "sentence_answer": "AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg."} +{"question": "Who was the visiting team?", "paragraph": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "answer": "Kings", "sentence": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings , and Quick stopped 31 shots.", "paragraph_sentence": " Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings , and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "paragraph_answer": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings , and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "sentence_answer": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings , and Quick stopped 31 shots."} +{"question": "How many goals did Quick give up", "paragraph": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "answer": "four", "sentence": "Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina.", "paragraph_sentence": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "paragraph_answer": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "sentence_answer": "Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina."} +{"question": "Who did Zach Redmond used to play for?", "paragraph": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "answer": "Jets", "sentence": "The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "paragraph_sentence": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45. ", "paragraph_answer": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "sentence_answer": "The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45."} +{"question": "Who stopped 31 shots?", "paragraph": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "answer": "Quick", "sentence": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots.", "paragraph_sentence": " Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "paragraph_answer": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "sentence_answer": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots."} +{"question": "Who was the visiting team?", "paragraph": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "answer": "Kings", "sentence": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings , and Quick stopped 31 shots.", "paragraph_sentence": " Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings , and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "paragraph_answer": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings , and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "sentence_answer": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings , and Quick stopped 31 shots."} +{"question": "How many goals did Quick give up", "paragraph": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "answer": "four", "sentence": "Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina.", "paragraph_sentence": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "paragraph_answer": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "sentence_answer": "Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina."} +{"question": "Who scored the tie breaking goal", "paragraph": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "answer": "Cody McLeod", "sentence": "AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg.", "paragraph_sentence": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "paragraph_answer": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "sentence_answer": "AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg."} +{"question": "Who did Zach Redmond used to play for?", "paragraph": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "answer": "Jets", "sentence": "The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "paragraph_sentence": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45. ", "paragraph_answer": "Marian Gaborik and Tyler Toffoli also scored for the visiting Kings, and Quick stopped 31 shots. Quick was back in net after being pulled when he gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods Sunday at Carolina. AVALANCHE 4, JETS 1 Cody McLeod scored the tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Colorado won at Winnipeg. The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45.", "sentence_answer": "The former Jets defenseman Zach Redmond\u2019s shot from in close clipped McLeod and rolled past Winnipeg goalie Michael Hutchinson for McLeod\u2019s fifth goal of the season at 6:45."} +{"question": "Who is the Labour leader?", "paragraph": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand, a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube. Mr. Brand, who is also known for his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians, has publicly urged Britons not to vote at all. But he is popular with young people, and Mr. Miliband in a tight race needs every vote he can get to become prime minister after the May 7 election.", "answer": "Ed Miliband", "sentence": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband , went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand, a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube.", "paragraph_sentence": " LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband , went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand, a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube. Mr. Brand, who is also known for his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians, has publicly urged Britons not to vote at all. But he is popular with young people, and Mr. Miliband in a tight race needs every vote he can get to become prime minister after the May 7 election.", "paragraph_answer": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband , went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand, a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube. Mr. Brand, who is also known for his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians, has publicly urged Britons not to vote at all. But he is popular with young people, and Mr. Miliband in a tight race needs every vote he can get to become prime minister after the May 7 election.", "sentence_answer": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband , went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand, a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube."} +{"question": "Whose apartment did Ed visit?", "paragraph": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand, a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube. Mr. Brand, who is also known for his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians, has publicly urged Britons not to vote at all. But he is popular with young people, and Mr. Miliband in a tight race needs every vote he can get to become prime minister after the May 7 election.", "answer": "Russell Brand", "sentence": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand , a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube.", "paragraph_sentence": " LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand , a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube. Mr. Brand, who is also known for his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians, has publicly urged Britons not to vote at all. But he is popular with young people, and Mr. Miliband in a tight race needs every vote he can get to become prime minister after the May 7 election.", "paragraph_answer": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand , a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube. Mr. Brand, who is also known for his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians, has publicly urged Britons not to vote at all. But he is popular with young people, and Mr. Miliband in a tight race needs every vote he can get to become prime minister after the May 7 election.", "sentence_answer": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand , a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube."} +{"question": "Who is Russell Brand?", "paragraph": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand, a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube. Mr. Brand, who is also known for his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians, has publicly urged Britons not to vote at all. But he is popular with young people, and Mr. Miliband in a tight race needs every vote he can get to become prime minister after the May 7 election.", "answer": "a bawdy comedian", "sentence": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand, a bawdy comedian , to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube.", "paragraph_sentence": " LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand, a bawdy comedian , to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube. Mr. Brand, who is also known for his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians, has publicly urged Britons not to vote at all. But he is popular with young people, and Mr. Miliband in a tight race needs every vote he can get to become prime minister after the May 7 election.", "paragraph_answer": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand, a bawdy comedian , to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube. Mr. Brand, who is also known for his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians, has publicly urged Britons not to vote at all. But he is popular with young people, and Mr. Miliband in a tight race needs every vote he can get to become prime minister after the May 7 election.", "sentence_answer": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand, a bawdy comedian , to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube."} +{"question": "Where was the interview posted?", "paragraph": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand, a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube. Mr. Brand, who is also known for his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians, has publicly urged Britons not to vote at all. But he is popular with young people, and Mr. Miliband in a tight race needs every vote he can get to become prime minister after the May 7 election.", "answer": "YouTube", "sentence": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand, a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube .", "paragraph_sentence": " LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand, a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube . Mr. Brand, who is also known for his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians, has publicly urged Britons not to vote at all. But he is popular with young people, and Mr. Miliband in a tight race needs every vote he can get to become prime minister after the May 7 election.", "paragraph_answer": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand, a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube . Mr. Brand, who is also known for his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians, has publicly urged Britons not to vote at all. But he is popular with young people, and Mr. Miliband in a tight race needs every vote he can get to become prime minister after the May 7 election.", "sentence_answer": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand, a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube ."} +{"question": "What is Russell Brand known for?", "paragraph": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand, a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube. Mr. Brand, who is also known for his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians, has publicly urged Britons not to vote at all. But he is popular with young people, and Mr. Miliband in a tight race needs every vote he can get to become prime minister after the May 7 election.", "answer": "his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians", "sentence": "Mr. Brand, who is also known for his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians , has publicly urged Britons not to vote at all.", "paragraph_sentence": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand, a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube. Mr. Brand, who is also known for his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians , has publicly urged Britons not to vote at all. But he is popular with young people, and Mr. Miliband in a tight race needs every vote he can get to become prime minister after the May 7 election.", "paragraph_answer": "LONDON \u2014 In one of the more bizarre moments of a tight British election campaign, the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, went in the dead of night Monday to the apartment of Russell Brand, a bawdy comedian, to give him an interview, which was posted Wednesday on YouTube. Mr. Brand, who is also known for his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians , has publicly urged Britons not to vote at all. But he is popular with young people, and Mr. Miliband in a tight race needs every vote he can get to become prime minister after the May 7 election.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Brand, who is also known for his expletive-filled rants against politics and politicians , has publicly urged Britons not to vote at all."} +{"question": "What is Britain's most popular newspaper?", "paragraph": "The right-wing Sun, still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d Prime Minister David Cameron, the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201cRussell Brand is a joke. Ed Miliband, to hang out with Russell Brand, he\u2019s a joke.\u201d But Mr. Miliband was unbowed. He told reporters, \u201cI will do anything and engage with anyone to try and persuade people to vote.\u201d And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones, praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general. In a coda to the interview, Mr. Brand praised Mr. Miliband for being \u201cprepared to come round here and talk to us.\u201d", "answer": "The right-wing Sun", "sentence": "The right-wing Sun , still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " The right-wing Sun , still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d Prime Minister David Cameron, the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201cRussell Brand is a joke. Ed Miliband, to hang out with Russell Brand, he\u2019s a joke.\u201d But Mr. Miliband was unbowed. He told reporters, \u201cI will do anything and engage with anyone to try and persuade people to vote.\u201d And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones, praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general. In a coda to the interview, Mr. Brand praised Mr. Miliband for being \u201cprepared to come round here and talk to us.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " The right-wing Sun , still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d Prime Minister David Cameron, the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201cRussell Brand is a joke. Ed Miliband, to hang out with Russell Brand, he\u2019s a joke.\u201d But Mr. Miliband was unbowed. He told reporters, \u201cI will do anything and engage with anyone to try and persuade people to vote.\u201d And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones, praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general. In a coda to the interview, Mr. Brand praised Mr. Miliband for being \u201cprepared to come round here and talk to us.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " The right-wing Sun , still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d"} +{"question": "Who is the Conservative Party Leader?", "paragraph": "The right-wing Sun, still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d Prime Minister David Cameron, the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201cRussell Brand is a joke. Ed Miliband, to hang out with Russell Brand, he\u2019s a joke.\u201d But Mr. Miliband was unbowed. He told reporters, \u201cI will do anything and engage with anyone to try and persuade people to vote.\u201d And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones, praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general. In a coda to the interview, Mr. Brand praised Mr. Miliband for being \u201cprepared to come round here and talk to us.\u201d", "answer": "Prime Minister David Cameron", "sentence": "The right-wing Sun, still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d Prime Minister David Cameron , the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201cRussell Brand is a joke.", "paragraph_sentence": " The right-wing Sun, still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d Prime Minister David Cameron , the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201cRussell Brand is a joke. Ed Miliband, to hang out with Russell Brand, he\u2019s a joke.\u201d But Mr. Miliband was unbowed. He told reporters, \u201cI will do anything and engage with anyone to try and persuade people to vote.\u201d And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones, praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general. In a coda to the interview, Mr. Brand praised Mr. Miliband for being \u201cprepared to come round here and talk to us.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The right-wing Sun, still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d Prime Minister David Cameron , the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201cRussell Brand is a joke. Ed Miliband, to hang out with Russell Brand, he\u2019s a joke.\u201d But Mr. Miliband was unbowed. He told reporters, \u201cI will do anything and engage with anyone to try and persuade people to vote.\u201d And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones, praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general. In a coda to the interview, Mr. Brand praised Mr. Miliband for being \u201cprepared to come round here and talk to us.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The right-wing Sun, still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d Prime Minister David Cameron , the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201cRussell Brand is a joke."} +{"question": "What did David say about Russell Brand?", "paragraph": "The right-wing Sun, still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d Prime Minister David Cameron, the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201cRussell Brand is a joke. Ed Miliband, to hang out with Russell Brand, he\u2019s a joke.\u201d But Mr. Miliband was unbowed. He told reporters, \u201cI will do anything and engage with anyone to try and persuade people to vote.\u201d And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones, praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general. In a coda to the interview, Mr. Brand praised Mr. Miliband for being \u201cprepared to come round here and talk to us.\u201d", "answer": "Russell Brand is a joke.", "sentence": "Prime Minister David Cameron, the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201c Russell Brand is a joke. Ed Miliband, to hang out with Russell Brand, he\u2019s a joke.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "The right-wing Sun, still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d Prime Minister David Cameron, the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201c Russell Brand is a joke. Ed Miliband, to hang out with Russell Brand, he\u2019s a joke.\u201d But Mr. Miliband was unbowed. He told reporters, \u201cI will do anything and engage with anyone to try and persuade people to vote.\u201d And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones, praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general. In a coda to the interview, Mr. Brand praised Mr. Miliband for being \u201cprepared to come round here and talk to us.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The right-wing Sun, still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d Prime Minister David Cameron, the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201c Russell Brand is a joke. Ed Miliband, to hang out with Russell Brand, he\u2019s a joke.\u201d But Mr. Miliband was unbowed. He told reporters, \u201cI will do anything and engage with anyone to try and persuade people to vote.\u201d And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones, praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general. In a coda to the interview, Mr. Brand praised Mr. Miliband for being \u201cprepared to come round here and talk to us.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Prime Minister David Cameron, the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201c Russell Brand is a joke. Ed Miliband, to hang out with Russell Brand, he\u2019s a joke.\u201d"} +{"question": "Who is one of David Cameron's supporters?", "paragraph": "The right-wing Sun, still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d Prime Minister David Cameron, the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201cRussell Brand is a joke. Ed Miliband, to hang out with Russell Brand, he\u2019s a joke.\u201d But Mr. Miliband was unbowed. He told reporters, \u201cI will do anything and engage with anyone to try and persuade people to vote.\u201d And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones, praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general. In a coda to the interview, Mr. Brand praised Mr. Miliband for being \u201cprepared to come round here and talk to us.\u201d", "answer": "Owen Jones", "sentence": "And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones , praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general.", "paragraph_sentence": "The right-wing Sun, still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d Prime Minister David Cameron, the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201cRussell Brand is a joke. Ed Miliband, to hang out with Russell Brand, he\u2019s a joke.\u201d But Mr. Miliband was unbowed. He told reporters, \u201cI will do anything and engage with anyone to try and persuade people to vote.\u201d And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones , praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general. In a coda to the interview, Mr. Brand praised Mr. Miliband for being \u201cprepared to come round here and talk to us.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The right-wing Sun, still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d Prime Minister David Cameron, the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201cRussell Brand is a joke. Ed Miliband, to hang out with Russell Brand, he\u2019s a joke.\u201d But Mr. Miliband was unbowed. He told reporters, \u201cI will do anything and engage with anyone to try and persuade people to vote.\u201d And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones , praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general. In a coda to the interview, Mr. Brand praised Mr. Miliband for being \u201cprepared to come round here and talk to us.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones , praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general."} +{"question": "What does Owen Jones do for a living?", "paragraph": "The right-wing Sun, still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d Prime Minister David Cameron, the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201cRussell Brand is a joke. Ed Miliband, to hang out with Russell Brand, he\u2019s a joke.\u201d But Mr. Miliband was unbowed. He told reporters, \u201cI will do anything and engage with anyone to try and persuade people to vote.\u201d And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones, praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general. In a coda to the interview, Mr. Brand praised Mr. Miliband for being \u201cprepared to come round here and talk to us.\u201d", "answer": "Guardian commentator", "sentence": "And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones, praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general.", "paragraph_sentence": "The right-wing Sun, still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d Prime Minister David Cameron, the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201cRussell Brand is a joke. Ed Miliband, to hang out with Russell Brand, he\u2019s a joke.\u201d But Mr. Miliband was unbowed. He told reporters, \u201cI will do anything and engage with anyone to try and persuade people to vote.\u201d And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones, praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general. In a coda to the interview, Mr. Brand praised Mr. Miliband for being \u201cprepared to come round here and talk to us.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The right-wing Sun, still Britain\u2019s most popular newspaper, said in an editorial that \u201cif there are possible votes in it, Miliband\u2019s there \u2014 spouting off in a comical Mockney accent,\u201d a fake Cockney accent, \u201cabout sticking it to the tax-dodging corporations.\u201d Prime Minister David Cameron, the Conservative Party leader, said earlier: \u201cRussell Brand is a joke. Ed Miliband, to hang out with Russell Brand, he\u2019s a joke.\u201d But Mr. Miliband was unbowed. He told reporters, \u201cI will do anything and engage with anyone to try and persuade people to vote.\u201d And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones, praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general. In a coda to the interview, Mr. Brand praised Mr. Miliband for being \u201cprepared to come round here and talk to us.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "And his supporters, including the Guardian commentator Owen Jones, praised his effort to reach those Britons who feel alienated by politicians and the system in general."} +{"question": "What did the interview remove?", "paragraph": "The interview drowned out Mr. Cameron\u2019s vow on Wednesday to introduce a law guaranteeing no rise in income tax rates, value-added tax or national insurance before 2020 if his party wins the election. The Labour Party dismissed Mr. Cameron\u2019s pledge as a \u201clast-minute gimmick,\u201d and said that the Conservatives had a \u201csecret plan\u201d to cut tax credits for families and raise the value-added tax. Labour even put together a website, torysecretplan.com, which features a fake email to Mr. Cameron from George Osborne, the chancellor of the Exchequer, laying out cuts not to be announced until after the election. Opinion polls suggest a hung Parliament, with no party winning an absolute majority, and the two main parties, the Conservatives and Labour, splitting about two-thirds of the vote.", "answer": "Mr. Cameron\u2019s vow", "sentence": "The interview drowned out Mr. Cameron\u2019s vow on Wednesday to introduce a law guaranteeing no rise in income tax rates, value-added tax or national insurance before 2020 if his party wins the election.", "paragraph_sentence": " The interview drowned out Mr. Cameron\u2019s vow on Wednesday to introduce a law guaranteeing no rise in income tax rates, value-added tax or national insurance before 2020 if his party wins the election. The Labour Party dismissed Mr. Cameron\u2019s pledge as a \u201clast-minute gimmick,\u201d and said that the Conservatives had a \u201csecret plan\u201d to cut tax credits for families and raise the value-added tax. Labour even put together a website, torysecretplan.com, which features a fake email to Mr. Cameron from George Osborne, the chancellor of the Exchequer, laying out cuts not to be announced until after the election. Opinion polls suggest a hung Parliament, with no party winning an absolute majority, and the two main parties, the Conservatives and Labour, splitting about two-thirds of the vote.", "paragraph_answer": "The interview drowned out Mr. Cameron\u2019s vow on Wednesday to introduce a law guaranteeing no rise in income tax rates, value-added tax or national insurance before 2020 if his party wins the election. The Labour Party dismissed Mr. Cameron\u2019s pledge as a \u201clast-minute gimmick,\u201d and said that the Conservatives had a \u201csecret plan\u201d to cut tax credits for families and raise the value-added tax. Labour even put together a website, torysecretplan.com, which features a fake email to Mr. Cameron from George Osborne, the chancellor of the Exchequer, laying out cuts not to be announced until after the election. Opinion polls suggest a hung Parliament, with no party winning an absolute majority, and the two main parties, the Conservatives and Labour, splitting about two-thirds of the vote.", "sentence_answer": "The interview drowned out Mr. Cameron\u2019s vow on Wednesday to introduce a law guaranteeing no rise in income tax rates, value-added tax or national insurance before 2020 if his party wins the election."} +{"question": "What law was Cameron trying to enact?", "paragraph": "The interview drowned out Mr. Cameron\u2019s vow on Wednesday to introduce a law guaranteeing no rise in income tax rates, value-added tax or national insurance before 2020 if his party wins the election. The Labour Party dismissed Mr. Cameron\u2019s pledge as a \u201clast-minute gimmick,\u201d and said that the Conservatives had a \u201csecret plan\u201d to cut tax credits for families and raise the value-added tax. Labour even put together a website, torysecretplan.com, which features a fake email to Mr. Cameron from George Osborne, the chancellor of the Exchequer, laying out cuts not to be announced until after the election. Opinion polls suggest a hung Parliament, with no party winning an absolute majority, and the two main parties, the Conservatives and Labour, splitting about two-thirds of the vote.", "answer": "no rise in income tax rates, value-added tax or national insurance", "sentence": "The interview drowned out Mr. Cameron\u2019s vow on Wednesday to introduce a law guaranteeing no rise in income tax rates, value-added tax or national insurance before 2020 if his party wins the election.", "paragraph_sentence": " The interview drowned out Mr. Cameron\u2019s vow on Wednesday to introduce a law guaranteeing no rise in income tax rates, value-added tax or national insurance before 2020 if his party wins the election. The Labour Party dismissed Mr. Cameron\u2019s pledge as a \u201clast-minute gimmick,\u201d and said that the Conservatives had a \u201csecret plan\u201d to cut tax credits for families and raise the value-added tax. Labour even put together a website, torysecretplan.com, which features a fake email to Mr. Cameron from George Osborne, the chancellor of the Exchequer, laying out cuts not to be announced until after the election. Opinion polls suggest a hung Parliament, with no party winning an absolute majority, and the two main parties, the Conservatives and Labour, splitting about two-thirds of the vote.", "paragraph_answer": "The interview drowned out Mr. Cameron\u2019s vow on Wednesday to introduce a law guaranteeing no rise in income tax rates, value-added tax or national insurance before 2020 if his party wins the election. The Labour Party dismissed Mr. Cameron\u2019s pledge as a \u201clast-minute gimmick,\u201d and said that the Conservatives had a \u201csecret plan\u201d to cut tax credits for families and raise the value-added tax. Labour even put together a website, torysecretplan.com, which features a fake email to Mr. Cameron from George Osborne, the chancellor of the Exchequer, laying out cuts not to be announced until after the election. Opinion polls suggest a hung Parliament, with no party winning an absolute majority, and the two main parties, the Conservatives and Labour, splitting about two-thirds of the vote.", "sentence_answer": "The interview drowned out Mr. Cameron\u2019s vow on Wednesday to introduce a law guaranteeing no rise in income tax rates, value-added tax or national insurance before 2020 if his party wins the election."} +{"question": "Who removed Cameron's pledge?", "paragraph": "The interview drowned out Mr. Cameron\u2019s vow on Wednesday to introduce a law guaranteeing no rise in income tax rates, value-added tax or national insurance before 2020 if his party wins the election. The Labour Party dismissed Mr. Cameron\u2019s pledge as a \u201clast-minute gimmick,\u201d and said that the Conservatives had a \u201csecret plan\u201d to cut tax credits for families and raise the value-added tax. Labour even put together a website, torysecretplan.com, which features a fake email to Mr. Cameron from George Osborne, the chancellor of the Exchequer, laying out cuts not to be announced until after the election. Opinion polls suggest a hung Parliament, with no party winning an absolute majority, and the two main parties, the Conservatives and Labour, splitting about two-thirds of the vote.", "answer": "The Labour Party", "sentence": "The Labour Party dismissed Mr. Cameron\u2019s pledge as a \u201clast-minute gimmick,\u201d and said that the Conservatives had a \u201csecret plan\u201d to cut tax credits for families and raise the value-added tax.", "paragraph_sentence": "The interview drowned out Mr. Cameron\u2019s vow on Wednesday to introduce a law guaranteeing no rise in income tax rates, value-added tax or national insurance before 2020 if his party wins the election. The Labour Party dismissed Mr. Cameron\u2019s pledge as a \u201clast-minute gimmick,\u201d and said that the Conservatives had a \u201csecret plan\u201d to cut tax credits for families and raise the value-added tax. Labour even put together a website, torysecretplan.com, which features a fake email to Mr. Cameron from George Osborne, the chancellor of the Exchequer, laying out cuts not to be announced until after the election. Opinion polls suggest a hung Parliament, with no party winning an absolute majority, and the two main parties, the Conservatives and Labour, splitting about two-thirds of the vote.", "paragraph_answer": "The interview drowned out Mr. Cameron\u2019s vow on Wednesday to introduce a law guaranteeing no rise in income tax rates, value-added tax or national insurance before 2020 if his party wins the election. The Labour Party dismissed Mr. Cameron\u2019s pledge as a \u201clast-minute gimmick,\u201d and said that the Conservatives had a \u201csecret plan\u201d to cut tax credits for families and raise the value-added tax. Labour even put together a website, torysecretplan.com, which features a fake email to Mr. Cameron from George Osborne, the chancellor of the Exchequer, laying out cuts not to be announced until after the election. Opinion polls suggest a hung Parliament, with no party winning an absolute majority, and the two main parties, the Conservatives and Labour, splitting about two-thirds of the vote.", "sentence_answer": " The Labour Party dismissed Mr. Cameron\u2019s pledge as a \u201clast-minute gimmick,\u201d and said that the Conservatives had a \u201csecret plan\u201d to cut tax credits for families and raise the value-added tax."} +{"question": "Who sent the fake email?", "paragraph": "The interview drowned out Mr. Cameron\u2019s vow on Wednesday to introduce a law guaranteeing no rise in income tax rates, value-added tax or national insurance before 2020 if his party wins the election. The Labour Party dismissed Mr. Cameron\u2019s pledge as a \u201clast-minute gimmick,\u201d and said that the Conservatives had a \u201csecret plan\u201d to cut tax credits for families and raise the value-added tax. Labour even put together a website, torysecretplan.com, which features a fake email to Mr. Cameron from George Osborne, the chancellor of the Exchequer, laying out cuts not to be announced until after the election. Opinion polls suggest a hung Parliament, with no party winning an absolute majority, and the two main parties, the Conservatives and Labour, splitting about two-thirds of the vote.", "answer": "George Osborne", "sentence": "Labour even put together a website, torysecretplan.com, which features a fake email to Mr. Cameron from George Osborne , the chancellor of the Exchequer, laying out cuts not to be announced until after the election.", "paragraph_sentence": "The interview drowned out Mr. Cameron\u2019s vow on Wednesday to introduce a law guaranteeing no rise in income tax rates, value-added tax or national insurance before 2020 if his party wins the election. The Labour Party dismissed Mr. Cameron\u2019s pledge as a \u201clast-minute gimmick,\u201d and said that the Conservatives had a \u201csecret plan\u201d to cut tax credits for families and raise the value-added tax. Labour even put together a website, torysecretplan.com, which features a fake email to Mr. Cameron from George Osborne , the chancellor of the Exchequer, laying out cuts not to be announced until after the election. Opinion polls suggest a hung Parliament, with no party winning an absolute majority, and the two main parties, the Conservatives and Labour, splitting about two-thirds of the vote.", "paragraph_answer": "The interview drowned out Mr. Cameron\u2019s vow on Wednesday to introduce a law guaranteeing no rise in income tax rates, value-added tax or national insurance before 2020 if his party wins the election. The Labour Party dismissed Mr. Cameron\u2019s pledge as a \u201clast-minute gimmick,\u201d and said that the Conservatives had a \u201csecret plan\u201d to cut tax credits for families and raise the value-added tax. Labour even put together a website, torysecretplan.com, which features a fake email to Mr. Cameron from George Osborne , the chancellor of the Exchequer, laying out cuts not to be announced until after the election. Opinion polls suggest a hung Parliament, with no party winning an absolute majority, and the two main parties, the Conservatives and Labour, splitting about two-thirds of the vote.", "sentence_answer": "Labour even put together a website, torysecretplan.com, which features a fake email to Mr. Cameron from George Osborne , the chancellor of the Exchequer, laying out cuts not to be announced until after the election."} +{"question": "Who is George Osborne?", "paragraph": "The interview drowned out Mr. Cameron\u2019s vow on Wednesday to introduce a law guaranteeing no rise in income tax rates, value-added tax or national insurance before 2020 if his party wins the election. The Labour Party dismissed Mr. Cameron\u2019s pledge as a \u201clast-minute gimmick,\u201d and said that the Conservatives had a \u201csecret plan\u201d to cut tax credits for families and raise the value-added tax. Labour even put together a website, torysecretplan.com, which features a fake email to Mr. Cameron from George Osborne, the chancellor of the Exchequer, laying out cuts not to be announced until after the election. Opinion polls suggest a hung Parliament, with no party winning an absolute majority, and the two main parties, the Conservatives and Labour, splitting about two-thirds of the vote.", "answer": "the chancellor of the Exchequer", "sentence": "Labour even put together a website, torysecretplan.com, which features a fake email to Mr. Cameron from George Osborne, the chancellor of the Exchequer , laying out cuts not to be announced until after the election.", "paragraph_sentence": "The interview drowned out Mr. Cameron\u2019s vow on Wednesday to introduce a law guaranteeing no rise in income tax rates, value-added tax or national insurance before 2020 if his party wins the election. The Labour Party dismissed Mr. Cameron\u2019s pledge as a \u201clast-minute gimmick,\u201d and said that the Conservatives had a \u201csecret plan\u201d to cut tax credits for families and raise the value-added tax. Labour even put together a website, torysecretplan.com, which features a fake email to Mr. Cameron from George Osborne, the chancellor of the Exchequer , laying out cuts not to be announced until after the election. Opinion polls suggest a hung Parliament, with no party winning an absolute majority, and the two main parties, the Conservatives and Labour, splitting about two-thirds of the vote.", "paragraph_answer": "The interview drowned out Mr. Cameron\u2019s vow on Wednesday to introduce a law guaranteeing no rise in income tax rates, value-added tax or national insurance before 2020 if his party wins the election. The Labour Party dismissed Mr. Cameron\u2019s pledge as a \u201clast-minute gimmick,\u201d and said that the Conservatives had a \u201csecret plan\u201d to cut tax credits for families and raise the value-added tax. Labour even put together a website, torysecretplan.com, which features a fake email to Mr. Cameron from George Osborne, the chancellor of the Exchequer , laying out cuts not to be announced until after the election. Opinion polls suggest a hung Parliament, with no party winning an absolute majority, and the two main parties, the Conservatives and Labour, splitting about two-thirds of the vote.", "sentence_answer": "Labour even put together a website, torysecretplan.com, which features a fake email to Mr. Cameron from George Osborne, the chancellor of the Exchequer , laying out cuts not to be announced until after the election."} +{"question": "Which city is mentioned?", "paragraph": "If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan. For all that it\u2019s been celebrated in song, summer in the city is often a miserable affair. (The lyrics of that Lovin\u2019 Spoonful hit are worth a second listen.) Best to get away, and any app that can help you do that as quickly as Wanderu is worth the space it takes up on your home screen. Not unlike travel websites like Kayak, Wanderu is a service for finding buses and trains to get you from here to there. It was launched two years ago in the Northeast, then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year. The service is now available in most of the United States.", "answer": "Manhattan", "sentence": "If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan .", "paragraph_sentence": " If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan . For all that it\u2019s been celebrated in song, summer in the city is often a miserable affair. (The lyrics of that Lovin\u2019 Spoonful hit are worth a second listen.) Best to get away, and any app that can help you do that as quickly as Wanderu is worth the space it takes up on your home screen. Not unlike travel websites like Kayak, Wanderu is a service for finding buses and trains to get you from here to there. It was launched two years ago in the Northeast, then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year. The service is now available in most of the United States.", "paragraph_answer": "If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan . For all that it\u2019s been celebrated in song, summer in the city is often a miserable affair. (The lyrics of that Lovin\u2019 Spoonful hit are worth a second listen.) Best to get away, and any app that can help you do that as quickly as Wanderu is worth the space it takes up on your home screen. Not unlike travel websites like Kayak, Wanderu is a service for finding buses and trains to get you from here to there. It was launched two years ago in the Northeast, then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year. The service is now available in most of the United States.", "sentence_answer": "If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan ."} +{"question": "Where did Wanderu first launch?", "paragraph": "If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan. For all that it\u2019s been celebrated in song, summer in the city is often a miserable affair. (The lyrics of that Lovin\u2019 Spoonful hit are worth a second listen.) Best to get away, and any app that can help you do that as quickly as Wanderu is worth the space it takes up on your home screen. Not unlike travel websites like Kayak, Wanderu is a service for finding buses and trains to get you from here to there. It was launched two years ago in the Northeast, then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year. The service is now available in most of the United States.", "answer": "Northeast", "sentence": "It was launched two years ago in the Northeast , then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year.", "paragraph_sentence": "If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan. For all that it\u2019s been celebrated in song, summer in the city is often a miserable affair. (The lyrics of that Lovin\u2019 Spoonful hit are worth a second listen.) Best to get away, and any app that can help you do that as quickly as Wanderu is worth the space it takes up on your home screen. Not unlike travel websites like Kayak, Wanderu is a service for finding buses and trains to get you from here to there. It was launched two years ago in the Northeast , then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year. The service is now available in most of the United States.", "paragraph_answer": "If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan. For all that it\u2019s been celebrated in song, summer in the city is often a miserable affair. (The lyrics of that Lovin\u2019 Spoonful hit are worth a second listen.) Best to get away, and any app that can help you do that as quickly as Wanderu is worth the space it takes up on your home screen. Not unlike travel websites like Kayak, Wanderu is a service for finding buses and trains to get you from here to there. It was launched two years ago in the Northeast , then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year. The service is now available in most of the United States.", "sentence_answer": "It was launched two years ago in the Northeast , then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year."} +{"question": "What travel website was mentioned that is also a name for a boat?", "paragraph": "If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan. For all that it\u2019s been celebrated in song, summer in the city is often a miserable affair. (The lyrics of that Lovin\u2019 Spoonful hit are worth a second listen.) Best to get away, and any app that can help you do that as quickly as Wanderu is worth the space it takes up on your home screen. Not unlike travel websites like Kayak, Wanderu is a service for finding buses and trains to get you from here to there. It was launched two years ago in the Northeast, then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year. The service is now available in most of the United States.", "answer": "Kayak", "sentence": "Not unlike travel websites like Kayak , Wanderu is a service for finding buses and trains to get you from here to there.", "paragraph_sentence": "If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan. For all that it\u2019s been celebrated in song, summer in the city is often a miserable affair. (The lyrics of that Lovin\u2019 Spoonful hit are worth a second listen.) Best to get away, and any app that can help you do that as quickly as Wanderu is worth the space it takes up on your home screen. Not unlike travel websites like Kayak , Wanderu is a service for finding buses and trains to get you from here to there. It was launched two years ago in the Northeast, then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year. The service is now available in most of the United States.", "paragraph_answer": "If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan. For all that it\u2019s been celebrated in song, summer in the city is often a miserable affair. (The lyrics of that Lovin\u2019 Spoonful hit are worth a second listen.) Best to get away, and any app that can help you do that as quickly as Wanderu is worth the space it takes up on your home screen. Not unlike travel websites like Kayak , Wanderu is a service for finding buses and trains to get you from here to there. It was launched two years ago in the Northeast, then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year. The service is now available in most of the United States.", "sentence_answer": "Not unlike travel websites like Kayak , Wanderu is a service for finding buses and trains to get you from here to there."} +{"question": "What is the app called that provides a service for finding ways to commute?", "paragraph": "If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan. For all that it\u2019s been celebrated in song, summer in the city is often a miserable affair. (The lyrics of that Lovin\u2019 Spoonful hit are worth a second listen.) Best to get away, and any app that can help you do that as quickly as Wanderu is worth the space it takes up on your home screen. Not unlike travel websites like Kayak, Wanderu is a service for finding buses and trains to get you from here to there. It was launched two years ago in the Northeast, then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year. The service is now available in most of the United States.", "answer": "Wanderu", "sentence": "Best to get away, and any app that can help you do that as quickly as Wanderu is worth the space it takes up on your home screen.", "paragraph_sentence": "If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan. For all that it\u2019s been celebrated in song, summer in the city is often a miserable affair. (The lyrics of that Lovin\u2019 Spoonful hit are worth a second listen.) Best to get away, and any app that can help you do that as quickly as Wanderu is worth the space it takes up on your home screen. Not unlike travel websites like Kayak, Wanderu is a service for finding buses and trains to get you from here to there. It was launched two years ago in the Northeast, then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year. The service is now available in most of the United States.", "paragraph_answer": "If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan. For all that it\u2019s been celebrated in song, summer in the city is often a miserable affair. (The lyrics of that Lovin\u2019 Spoonful hit are worth a second listen.) Best to get away, and any app that can help you do that as quickly as Wanderu is worth the space it takes up on your home screen. Not unlike travel websites like Kayak, Wanderu is a service for finding buses and trains to get you from here to there. It was launched two years ago in the Northeast, then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year. The service is now available in most of the United States.", "sentence_answer": "Best to get away, and any app that can help you do that as quickly as Wanderu is worth the space it takes up on your home screen."} +{"question": "Which two phone types does Wanderu support?", "paragraph": "If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan. For all that it\u2019s been celebrated in song, summer in the city is often a miserable affair. (The lyrics of that Lovin\u2019 Spoonful hit are worth a second listen.) Best to get away, and any app that can help you do that as quickly as Wanderu is worth the space it takes up on your home screen. Not unlike travel websites like Kayak, Wanderu is a service for finding buses and trains to get you from here to there. It was launched two years ago in the Northeast, then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year. The service is now available in most of the United States.", "answer": "iPhone and Android", "sentence": "It was launched two years ago in the Northeast, then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year.", "paragraph_sentence": "If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan. For all that it\u2019s been celebrated in song, summer in the city is often a miserable affair. (The lyrics of that Lovin\u2019 Spoonful hit are worth a second listen.) Best to get away, and any app that can help you do that as quickly as Wanderu is worth the space it takes up on your home screen. Not unlike travel websites like Kayak, Wanderu is a service for finding buses and trains to get you from here to there. It was launched two years ago in the Northeast, then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year. The service is now available in most of the United States.", "paragraph_answer": "If you\u2019re lucky, you\u2019re reading this somewhere other than Manhattan. For all that it\u2019s been celebrated in song, summer in the city is often a miserable affair. (The lyrics of that Lovin\u2019 Spoonful hit are worth a second listen.) Best to get away, and any app that can help you do that as quickly as Wanderu is worth the space it takes up on your home screen. Not unlike travel websites like Kayak, Wanderu is a service for finding buses and trains to get you from here to there. It was launched two years ago in the Northeast, then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year. The service is now available in most of the United States.", "sentence_answer": "It was launched two years ago in the Northeast, then gradually expanded its range before releasing iPhone and Android apps earlier this year."} +{"question": "Which two words does the Wanderu app's home screen display?", "paragraph": "The Wanderu app\u2019s home screen asks \u201cWhere to?\u201d and the temptation to type in all your dream destinations (New Orleans! Arches National Park!) is strong. You can enter the name of a city, but also an exact address or even a landmark. Wanderu is set up to find you a travel option that will get you as close as possible to a specific place. Results can be sorted by time (earliest and latest buses and trains on a given day) and price. Every time someone purchases a trip on Wanderu, the company takes a percentage of the sale from the bus or train company. It doesn\u2019t charge users or use advertising.", "answer": "\u201cWhere to?\u201d", "sentence": "The Wanderu app\u2019s home screen asks \u201cWhere to?\u201d and the temptation to type in all your dream destinations (New Orleans!", "paragraph_sentence": " The Wanderu app\u2019s home screen asks \u201cWhere to?\u201d and the temptation to type in all your dream destinations (New Orleans! Arches National Park!) is strong. You can enter the name of a city, but also an exact address or even a landmark. Wanderu is set up to find you a travel option that will get you as close as possible to a specific place. Results can be sorted by time (earliest and latest buses and trains on a given day) and price. Every time someone purchases a trip on Wanderu, the company takes a percentage of the sale from the bus or train company. It doesn\u2019t charge users or use advertising.", "paragraph_answer": "The Wanderu app\u2019s home screen asks \u201cWhere to?\u201d and the temptation to type in all your dream destinations (New Orleans! Arches National Park!) is strong. You can enter the name of a city, but also an exact address or even a landmark. Wanderu is set up to find you a travel option that will get you as close as possible to a specific place. Results can be sorted by time (earliest and latest buses and trains on a given day) and price. Every time someone purchases a trip on Wanderu, the company takes a percentage of the sale from the bus or train company. It doesn\u2019t charge users or use advertising.", "sentence_answer": "The Wanderu app\u2019s home screen asks \u201cWhere to?\u201d and the temptation to type in all your dream destinations (New Orleans!"} +{"question": "Which national park is mentioned?", "paragraph": "The Wanderu app\u2019s home screen asks \u201cWhere to?\u201d and the temptation to type in all your dream destinations (New Orleans! Arches National Park!) is strong. You can enter the name of a city, but also an exact address or even a landmark. Wanderu is set up to find you a travel option that will get you as close as possible to a specific place. Results can be sorted by time (earliest and latest buses and trains on a given day) and price. Every time someone purchases a trip on Wanderu, the company takes a percentage of the sale from the bus or train company. It doesn\u2019t charge users or use advertising.", "answer": "Arches National Park", "sentence": "and the temptation to type in all your dream destinations (New Orleans! Arches National Park !) is strong.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Wanderu app\u2019s home screen asks \u201cWhere to?\u201d and the temptation to type in all your dream destinations (New Orleans! Arches National Park !) is strong. You can enter the name of a city, but also an exact address or even a landmark. Wanderu is set up to find you a travel option that will get you as close as possible to a specific place. Results can be sorted by time (earliest and latest buses and trains on a given day) and price. Every time someone purchases a trip on Wanderu, the company takes a percentage of the sale from the bus or train company. It doesn\u2019t charge users or use advertising.", "paragraph_answer": "The Wanderu app\u2019s home screen asks \u201cWhere to?\u201d and the temptation to type in all your dream destinations (New Orleans! Arches National Park !) is strong. You can enter the name of a city, but also an exact address or even a landmark. Wanderu is set up to find you a travel option that will get you as close as possible to a specific place. Results can be sorted by time (earliest and latest buses and trains on a given day) and price. Every time someone purchases a trip on Wanderu, the company takes a percentage of the sale from the bus or train company. It doesn\u2019t charge users or use advertising.", "sentence_answer": "and the temptation to type in all your dream destinations (New Orleans! Arches National Park !) is strong."} +{"question": "Which two ways can results be sorted by?", "paragraph": "The Wanderu app\u2019s home screen asks \u201cWhere to?\u201d and the temptation to type in all your dream destinations (New Orleans! Arches National Park!) is strong. You can enter the name of a city, but also an exact address or even a landmark. Wanderu is set up to find you a travel option that will get you as close as possible to a specific place. Results can be sorted by time (earliest and latest buses and trains on a given day) and price. Every time someone purchases a trip on Wanderu, the company takes a percentage of the sale from the bus or train company. It doesn\u2019t charge users or use advertising.", "answer": "earliest and latest", "sentence": "Results can be sorted by time ( earliest and latest buses and trains on a given day) and price.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Wanderu app\u2019s home screen asks \u201cWhere to?\u201d and the temptation to type in all your dream destinations (New Orleans! Arches National Park!) is strong. You can enter the name of a city, but also an exact address or even a landmark. Wanderu is set up to find you a travel option that will get you as close as possible to a specific place. Results can be sorted by time ( earliest and latest buses and trains on a given day) and price. Every time someone purchases a trip on Wanderu, the company takes a percentage of the sale from the bus or train company. It doesn\u2019t charge users or use advertising.", "paragraph_answer": "The Wanderu app\u2019s home screen asks \u201cWhere to?\u201d and the temptation to type in all your dream destinations (New Orleans! Arches National Park!) is strong. You can enter the name of a city, but also an exact address or even a landmark. Wanderu is set up to find you a travel option that will get you as close as possible to a specific place. Results can be sorted by time ( earliest and latest buses and trains on a given day) and price. Every time someone purchases a trip on Wanderu, the company takes a percentage of the sale from the bus or train company. It doesn\u2019t charge users or use advertising.", "sentence_answer": "Results can be sorted by time ( earliest and latest buses and trains on a given day) and price."} +{"question": "What does the company take when someone uses Wanderu to purchase a trip?", "paragraph": "The Wanderu app\u2019s home screen asks \u201cWhere to?\u201d and the temptation to type in all your dream destinations (New Orleans! Arches National Park!) is strong. You can enter the name of a city, but also an exact address or even a landmark. Wanderu is set up to find you a travel option that will get you as close as possible to a specific place. Results can be sorted by time (earliest and latest buses and trains on a given day) and price. Every time someone purchases a trip on Wanderu, the company takes a percentage of the sale from the bus or train company. It doesn\u2019t charge users or use advertising.", "answer": "a percentage", "sentence": "Every time someone purchases a trip on Wanderu, the company takes a percentage of the sale from the bus or train company.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Wanderu app\u2019s home screen asks \u201cWhere to?\u201d and the temptation to type in all your dream destinations (New Orleans! Arches National Park!) is strong. You can enter the name of a city, but also an exact address or even a landmark. Wanderu is set up to find you a travel option that will get you as close as possible to a specific place. Results can be sorted by time (earliest and latest buses and trains on a given day) and price. Every time someone purchases a trip on Wanderu, the company takes a percentage of the sale from the bus or train company. It doesn\u2019t charge users or use advertising.", "paragraph_answer": "The Wanderu app\u2019s home screen asks \u201cWhere to?\u201d and the temptation to type in all your dream destinations (New Orleans! Arches National Park!) is strong. You can enter the name of a city, but also an exact address or even a landmark. Wanderu is set up to find you a travel option that will get you as close as possible to a specific place. Results can be sorted by time (earliest and latest buses and trains on a given day) and price. Every time someone purchases a trip on Wanderu, the company takes a percentage of the sale from the bus or train company. It doesn\u2019t charge users or use advertising.", "sentence_answer": "Every time someone purchases a trip on Wanderu, the company takes a percentage of the sale from the bus or train company."} +{"question": "How much does Wanderu cost?", "paragraph": "The Wanderu app\u2019s home screen asks \u201cWhere to?\u201d and the temptation to type in all your dream destinations (New Orleans! Arches National Park!) is strong. You can enter the name of a city, but also an exact address or even a landmark. Wanderu is set up to find you a travel option that will get you as close as possible to a specific place. Results can be sorted by time (earliest and latest buses and trains on a given day) and price. Every time someone purchases a trip on Wanderu, the company takes a percentage of the sale from the bus or train company. It doesn\u2019t charge users or use advertising.", "answer": "It doesn\u2019t charge users or use advertising.", "sentence": "It doesn\u2019t charge users or use advertising.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Wanderu app\u2019s home screen asks \u201cWhere to?\u201d and the temptation to type in all your dream destinations (New Orleans! Arches National Park!) is strong. You can enter the name of a city, but also an exact address or even a landmark. Wanderu is set up to find you a travel option that will get you as close as possible to a specific place. Results can be sorted by time (earliest and latest buses and trains on a given day) and price. Every time someone purchases a trip on Wanderu, the company takes a percentage of the sale from the bus or train company. It doesn\u2019t charge users or use advertising. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Wanderu app\u2019s home screen asks \u201cWhere to?\u201d and the temptation to type in all your dream destinations (New Orleans! Arches National Park!) is strong. You can enter the name of a city, but also an exact address or even a landmark. Wanderu is set up to find you a travel option that will get you as close as possible to a specific place. Results can be sorted by time (earliest and latest buses and trains on a given day) and price. Every time someone purchases a trip on Wanderu, the company takes a percentage of the sale from the bus or train company. It doesn\u2019t charge users or use advertising. ", "sentence_answer": " It doesn\u2019t charge users or use advertising. "} +{"question": "What team was Syndergaard pitching against?", "paragraph": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "answer": "Dodgers", "sentence": "He suffocated the Dodgers , holding them to two hits and one run in six innings.", "paragraph_sentence": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers , holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers , holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "He suffocated the Dodgers , holding them to two hits and one run in six innings."} +{"question": "Who was pitching for the opposite team?", "paragraph": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "answer": "Clayton Kershaw", "sentence": "\u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does.", "paragraph_sentence": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does."} +{"question": "What was the final score of the game?", "paragraph": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "answer": "2-1", "sentence": "He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win.", "paragraph_sentence": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win."} +{"question": "How many hits did the opposing team have against Syndergaard?", "paragraph": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "answer": "two", "sentence": "He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings.", "paragraph_sentence": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings."} +{"question": "How many innings did Syndergaard pitch?", "paragraph": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "answer": "six", "sentence": "He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings.", "paragraph_sentence": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Syndergaard then gave the type of performance that defines a player\u2019s season, the kind that can instill confidence in a rookie and propel him to new heights. He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings. He pitched even with Kershaw, perhaps even better, and gave the Mets\u2019 porous offense the chance to squeak out a 2-1 win. Syndergaard pitched so well that, afterward, a reporter asked him if this start had stamped him as one of the best young pitchers in baseball, and he did not scoff at the question. \u201cI hope so,\u201d Syndergaard said. \u201cBut, I mean, I certainly don\u2019t think I\u2019m there yet to carry the name as Clayton Kershaw does. But hopefully I\u2019ll get there.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "He suffocated the Dodgers, holding them to two hits and one run in six innings."} +{"question": "Who did Syndergaard strike out twice?", "paragraph": "Syndergaard appeared confident and collected early on. He struck out Jimmy Rollins twice \u2014 once swinging, on a 97-mile-per-hour fastball, and then looking, on a 99-m.p.h. fastball. He struck out Joc Pederson, another touted rookie, leaving him flailing at a curveball. He showed improved confidence in his off-speed pitches, using the Dodgers\u2019 aggressiveness against them.", "answer": "Jimmy Rollins", "sentence": "He struck out Jimmy Rollins twice \u2014 once swinging, on a 97-mile-per-hour fastball, and then looking, on a 99-m.p.h.", "paragraph_sentence": "Syndergaard appeared confident and collected early on. He struck out Jimmy Rollins twice \u2014 once swinging, on a 97-mile-per-hour fastball, and then looking, on a 99-m.p.h. fastball. He struck out Joc Pederson, another touted rookie, leaving him flailing at a curveball. He showed improved confidence in his off-speed pitches, using the Dodgers\u2019 aggressiveness against them.", "paragraph_answer": "Syndergaard appeared confident and collected early on. He struck out Jimmy Rollins twice \u2014 once swinging, on a 97-mile-per-hour fastball, and then looking, on a 99-m.p.h. fastball. He struck out Joc Pederson, another touted rookie, leaving him flailing at a curveball. He showed improved confidence in his off-speed pitches, using the Dodgers\u2019 aggressiveness against them.", "sentence_answer": "He struck out Jimmy Rollins twice \u2014 once swinging, on a 97-mile-per-hour fastball, and then looking, on a 99-m.p.h."} +{"question": "What kind of pitch did Joc Pederson strike out on?", "paragraph": "Syndergaard appeared confident and collected early on. He struck out Jimmy Rollins twice \u2014 once swinging, on a 97-mile-per-hour fastball, and then looking, on a 99-m.p.h. fastball. He struck out Joc Pederson, another touted rookie, leaving him flailing at a curveball. He showed improved confidence in his off-speed pitches, using the Dodgers\u2019 aggressiveness against them.", "answer": "curveball", "sentence": "He struck out Joc Pederson, another touted rookie, leaving him flailing at a curveball .", "paragraph_sentence": "Syndergaard appeared confident and collected early on. He struck out Jimmy Rollins twice \u2014 once swinging, on a 97-mile-per-hour fastball, and then looking, on a 99-m.p.h. fastball. He struck out Joc Pederson, another touted rookie, leaving him flailing at a curveball . He showed improved confidence in his off-speed pitches, using the Dodgers\u2019 aggressiveness against them.", "paragraph_answer": "Syndergaard appeared confident and collected early on. He struck out Jimmy Rollins twice \u2014 once swinging, on a 97-mile-per-hour fastball, and then looking, on a 99-m.p.h. fastball. He struck out Joc Pederson, another touted rookie, leaving him flailing at a curveball . He showed improved confidence in his off-speed pitches, using the Dodgers\u2019 aggressiveness against them.", "sentence_answer": "He struck out Joc Pederson, another touted rookie, leaving him flailing at a curveball ."} +{"question": "What was the speed of Syndergaard's fastest pitch?", "paragraph": "Syndergaard appeared confident and collected early on. He struck out Jimmy Rollins twice \u2014 once swinging, on a 97-mile-per-hour fastball, and then looking, on a 99-m.p.h. fastball. He struck out Joc Pederson, another touted rookie, leaving him flailing at a curveball. He showed improved confidence in his off-speed pitches, using the Dodgers\u2019 aggressiveness against them.", "answer": "99-m.p.h.", "sentence": "He struck out Jimmy Rollins twice \u2014 once swinging, on a 97-mile-per-hour fastball, and then looking, on a 99-m.p.h. fastball.", "paragraph_sentence": "Syndergaard appeared confident and collected early on. He struck out Jimmy Rollins twice \u2014 once swinging, on a 97-mile-per-hour fastball, and then looking, on a 99-m.p.h. fastball. He struck out Joc Pederson, another touted rookie, leaving him flailing at a curveball. He showed improved confidence in his off-speed pitches, using the Dodgers\u2019 aggressiveness against them.", "paragraph_answer": "Syndergaard appeared confident and collected early on. He struck out Jimmy Rollins twice \u2014 once swinging, on a 97-mile-per-hour fastball, and then looking, on a 99-m.p.h. fastball. He struck out Joc Pederson, another touted rookie, leaving him flailing at a curveball. He showed improved confidence in his off-speed pitches, using the Dodgers\u2019 aggressiveness against them.", "sentence_answer": "He struck out Jimmy Rollins twice \u2014 once swinging, on a 97-mile-per-hour fastball, and then looking, on a 99-m.p.h. fastball."} +{"question": "Was Pederson a veteran player or a rookie?", "paragraph": "Syndergaard appeared confident and collected early on. He struck out Jimmy Rollins twice \u2014 once swinging, on a 97-mile-per-hour fastball, and then looking, on a 99-m.p.h. fastball. He struck out Joc Pederson, another touted rookie, leaving him flailing at a curveball. He showed improved confidence in his off-speed pitches, using the Dodgers\u2019 aggressiveness against them.", "answer": "rookie", "sentence": "He struck out Joc Pederson, another touted rookie , leaving him flailing at a curveball.", "paragraph_sentence": "Syndergaard appeared confident and collected early on. He struck out Jimmy Rollins twice \u2014 once swinging, on a 97-mile-per-hour fastball, and then looking, on a 99-m.p.h. fastball. He struck out Joc Pederson, another touted rookie , leaving him flailing at a curveball. He showed improved confidence in his off-speed pitches, using the Dodgers\u2019 aggressiveness against them.", "paragraph_answer": "Syndergaard appeared confident and collected early on. He struck out Jimmy Rollins twice \u2014 once swinging, on a 97-mile-per-hour fastball, and then looking, on a 99-m.p.h. fastball. He struck out Joc Pederson, another touted rookie , leaving him flailing at a curveball. He showed improved confidence in his off-speed pitches, using the Dodgers\u2019 aggressiveness against them.", "sentence_answer": "He struck out Joc Pederson, another touted rookie , leaving him flailing at a curveball."} +{"question": "What attribute did Syndergaard use against the Dodgers?", "paragraph": "Syndergaard appeared confident and collected early on. He struck out Jimmy Rollins twice \u2014 once swinging, on a 97-mile-per-hour fastball, and then looking, on a 99-m.p.h. fastball. He struck out Joc Pederson, another touted rookie, leaving him flailing at a curveball. He showed improved confidence in his off-speed pitches, using the Dodgers\u2019 aggressiveness against them.", "answer": "aggressiveness", "sentence": "He showed improved confidence in his off-speed pitches, using the Dodgers\u2019 aggressiveness against them.", "paragraph_sentence": "Syndergaard appeared confident and collected early on. He struck out Jimmy Rollins twice \u2014 once swinging, on a 97-mile-per-hour fastball, and then looking, on a 99-m.p.h. fastball. He struck out Joc Pederson, another touted rookie, leaving him flailing at a curveball. He showed improved confidence in his off-speed pitches, using the Dodgers\u2019 aggressiveness against them. ", "paragraph_answer": "Syndergaard appeared confident and collected early on. He struck out Jimmy Rollins twice \u2014 once swinging, on a 97-mile-per-hour fastball, and then looking, on a 99-m.p.h. fastball. He struck out Joc Pederson, another touted rookie, leaving him flailing at a curveball. He showed improved confidence in his off-speed pitches, using the Dodgers\u2019 aggressiveness against them.", "sentence_answer": "He showed improved confidence in his off-speed pitches, using the Dodgers\u2019 aggressiveness against them."} +{"question": "When did Vanity Fair begin advertising?", "paragraph": "96 YEARS AGO Prehistory \u2014 before the Kardashians and Caitlyn with a C, before even the naked and pregnant Demi Moore \u2014 Vanity Fair knew how to strike with an image. It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919, during the magazine\u2019s first heyday. \u201cVanity Fair prides itself on knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages,\u201d the ad copy read. This was \u201cthe magazine of leisure interests for men who know enough to have them,\u201d or so its tagline declared in a series of wittily wordy ads that ran in The Times. The image that struck hardest in those early years was not a photograph of a \u201clovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman,\u201d however. It was a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan, and it was the subject of an international incident.", "answer": "1919", "sentence": "It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919 , during the magazine\u2019s first heyday.", "paragraph_sentence": "96 YEARS AGO Prehistory \u2014 before the Kardashians and Caitlyn with a C, before even the naked and pregnant Demi Moore \u2014 Vanity Fair knew how to strike with an image. It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919 , during the magazine\u2019s first heyday. \u201cVanity Fair prides itself on knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages,\u201d the ad copy read. This was \u201cthe magazine of leisure interests for men who know enough to have them,\u201d or so its tagline declared in a series of wittily wordy ads that ran in The Times. The image that struck hardest in those early years was not a photograph of a \u201clovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman,\u201d however. It was a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan, and it was the subject of an international incident.", "paragraph_answer": "96 YEARS AGO Prehistory \u2014 before the Kardashians and Caitlyn with a C, before even the naked and pregnant Demi Moore \u2014 Vanity Fair knew how to strike with an image. It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919 , during the magazine\u2019s first heyday. \u201cVanity Fair prides itself on knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages,\u201d the ad copy read. This was \u201cthe magazine of leisure interests for men who know enough to have them,\u201d or so its tagline declared in a series of wittily wordy ads that ran in The Times. The image that struck hardest in those early years was not a photograph of a \u201clovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman,\u201d however. It was a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan, and it was the subject of an international incident.", "sentence_answer": "It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919 , during the magazine\u2019s first heyday."} +{"question": "Where did Vanity Fair first advertise?", "paragraph": "96 YEARS AGO Prehistory \u2014 before the Kardashians and Caitlyn with a C, before even the naked and pregnant Demi Moore \u2014 Vanity Fair knew how to strike with an image. It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919, during the magazine\u2019s first heyday. \u201cVanity Fair prides itself on knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages,\u201d the ad copy read. This was \u201cthe magazine of leisure interests for men who know enough to have them,\u201d or so its tagline declared in a series of wittily wordy ads that ran in The Times. The image that struck hardest in those early years was not a photograph of a \u201clovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman,\u201d however. It was a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan, and it was the subject of an international incident.", "answer": "The New York Times", "sentence": "It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919, during the magazine\u2019s first heyday.", "paragraph_sentence": "96 YEARS AGO Prehistory \u2014 before the Kardashians and Caitlyn with a C, before even the naked and pregnant Demi Moore \u2014 Vanity Fair knew how to strike with an image. It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919, during the magazine\u2019s first heyday. \u201cVanity Fair prides itself on knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages,\u201d the ad copy read. This was \u201cthe magazine of leisure interests for men who know enough to have them,\u201d or so its tagline declared in a series of wittily wordy ads that ran in The Times. The image that struck hardest in those early years was not a photograph of a \u201clovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman,\u201d however. It was a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan, and it was the subject of an international incident.", "paragraph_answer": "96 YEARS AGO Prehistory \u2014 before the Kardashians and Caitlyn with a C, before even the naked and pregnant Demi Moore \u2014 Vanity Fair knew how to strike with an image. It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919, during the magazine\u2019s first heyday. \u201cVanity Fair prides itself on knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages,\u201d the ad copy read. This was \u201cthe magazine of leisure interests for men who know enough to have them,\u201d or so its tagline declared in a series of wittily wordy ads that ran in The Times. The image that struck hardest in those early years was not a photograph of a \u201clovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman,\u201d however. It was a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan, and it was the subject of an international incident.", "sentence_answer": "It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919, during the magazine\u2019s first heyday."} +{"question": "What image first gained traction in the early years?", "paragraph": "96 YEARS AGO Prehistory \u2014 before the Kardashians and Caitlyn with a C, before even the naked and pregnant Demi Moore \u2014 Vanity Fair knew how to strike with an image. It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919, during the magazine\u2019s first heyday. \u201cVanity Fair prides itself on knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages,\u201d the ad copy read. This was \u201cthe magazine of leisure interests for men who know enough to have them,\u201d or so its tagline declared in a series of wittily wordy ads that ran in The Times. The image that struck hardest in those early years was not a photograph of a \u201clovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman,\u201d however. It was a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan, and it was the subject of an international incident.", "answer": "a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan", "sentence": "It was a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan , and it was the subject of an international incident.", "paragraph_sentence": "96 YEARS AGO Prehistory \u2014 before the Kardashians and Caitlyn with a C, before even the naked and pregnant Demi Moore \u2014 Vanity Fair knew how to strike with an image. It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919, during the magazine\u2019s first heyday. \u201cVanity Fair prides itself on knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages,\u201d the ad copy read. This was \u201cthe magazine of leisure interests for men who know enough to have them,\u201d or so its tagline declared in a series of wittily wordy ads that ran in The Times. The image that struck hardest in those early years was not a photograph of a \u201clovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman,\u201d however. It was a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan , and it was the subject of an international incident. ", "paragraph_answer": "96 YEARS AGO Prehistory \u2014 before the Kardashians and Caitlyn with a C, before even the naked and pregnant Demi Moore \u2014 Vanity Fair knew how to strike with an image. It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919, during the magazine\u2019s first heyday. \u201cVanity Fair prides itself on knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages,\u201d the ad copy read. This was \u201cthe magazine of leisure interests for men who know enough to have them,\u201d or so its tagline declared in a series of wittily wordy ads that ran in The Times. The image that struck hardest in those early years was not a photograph of a \u201clovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman,\u201d however. It was a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan , and it was the subject of an international incident.", "sentence_answer": "It was a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan , and it was the subject of an international incident."} +{"question": "What does Vanity Fair pride itself on?", "paragraph": "96 YEARS AGO Prehistory \u2014 before the Kardashians and Caitlyn with a C, before even the naked and pregnant Demi Moore \u2014 Vanity Fair knew how to strike with an image. It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919, during the magazine\u2019s first heyday. \u201cVanity Fair prides itself on knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages,\u201d the ad copy read. This was \u201cthe magazine of leisure interests for men who know enough to have them,\u201d or so its tagline declared in a series of wittily wordy ads that ran in The Times. The image that struck hardest in those early years was not a photograph of a \u201clovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman,\u201d however. It was a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan, and it was the subject of an international incident.", "answer": "knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages,", "sentence": "\u201cVanity Fair prides itself on knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages, \u201d the ad copy read.", "paragraph_sentence": "96 YEARS AGO Prehistory \u2014 before the Kardashians and Caitlyn with a C, before even the naked and pregnant Demi Moore \u2014 Vanity Fair knew how to strike with an image. It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919, during the magazine\u2019s first heyday. \u201cVanity Fair prides itself on knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages, \u201d the ad copy read. This was \u201cthe magazine of leisure interests for men who know enough to have them,\u201d or so its tagline declared in a series of wittily wordy ads that ran in The Times. The image that struck hardest in those early years was not a photograph of a \u201clovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman,\u201d however. It was a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan, and it was the subject of an international incident.", "paragraph_answer": "96 YEARS AGO Prehistory \u2014 before the Kardashians and Caitlyn with a C, before even the naked and pregnant Demi Moore \u2014 Vanity Fair knew how to strike with an image. It boasted as much in advertisements published in The New York Times in 1919, during the magazine\u2019s first heyday. \u201cVanity Fair prides itself on knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages, \u201d the ad copy read. This was \u201cthe magazine of leisure interests for men who know enough to have them,\u201d or so its tagline declared in a series of wittily wordy ads that ran in The Times. The image that struck hardest in those early years was not a photograph of a \u201clovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman,\u201d however. It was a cartoon that depicted Emperor Hirohito of Japan, and it was the subject of an international incident.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cVanity Fair prides itself on knowing every lovely, brilliant, or bizarre woman in the world and printing her photograph in its pages, \u201d the ad copy read."} +{"question": "Who holds the position of Japanese ambassador?", "paragraph": "The Japanese ambassador, Hirosi Saito, who was planning to meet with the United States secretary of state \u201cto take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation,\u201d went on to explain that \u201cwhile he fully comprehended that in this country, where caricatures of the highest public officials are every day fare in the press, no slight to the person of the Emperor was necessarily intended, yet in Japan a representation of the Emperor as engaged in the menial task of pulling a cart could not be understood or taken lightly.\u201d", "answer": "Hirosi Saito", "sentence": "The Japanese ambassador, Hirosi Saito , who was planning to meet with the United States secretary of state \u201cto take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation,\u201d went on to explain that \u201cwhile he fully comprehended that in this country, where caricatures of the highest public officials are every day fare in the press, no slight to the person of the Emperor was necessarily intended, yet in Japan a representation of the Emperor as engaged in the menial task of pulling a cart could not be understood or taken lightly.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " The Japanese ambassador, Hirosi Saito , who was planning to meet with the United States secretary of state \u201cto take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation,\u201d went on to explain that \u201cwhile he fully comprehended that in this country, where caricatures of the highest public officials are every day fare in the press, no slight to the person of the Emperor was necessarily intended, yet in Japan a representation of the Emperor as engaged in the menial task of pulling a cart could not be understood or taken lightly.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "The Japanese ambassador, Hirosi Saito , who was planning to meet with the United States secretary of state \u201cto take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation,\u201d went on to explain that \u201cwhile he fully comprehended that in this country, where caricatures of the highest public officials are every day fare in the press, no slight to the person of the Emperor was necessarily intended, yet in Japan a representation of the Emperor as engaged in the menial task of pulling a cart could not be understood or taken lightly.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The Japanese ambassador, Hirosi Saito , who was planning to meet with the United States secretary of state \u201cto take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation,\u201d went on to explain that \u201cwhile he fully comprehended that in this country, where caricatures of the highest public officials are every day fare in the press, no slight to the person of the Emperor was necessarily intended, yet in Japan a representation of the Emperor as engaged in the menial task of pulling a cart could not be understood or taken lightly.\u201d"} +{"question": "Who was Hirosi Saito planning to meet with?", "paragraph": "The Japanese ambassador, Hirosi Saito, who was planning to meet with the United States secretary of state \u201cto take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation,\u201d went on to explain that \u201cwhile he fully comprehended that in this country, where caricatures of the highest public officials are every day fare in the press, no slight to the person of the Emperor was necessarily intended, yet in Japan a representation of the Emperor as engaged in the menial task of pulling a cart could not be understood or taken lightly.\u201d", "answer": "the United States secretary of state", "sentence": "The Japanese ambassador, Hirosi Saito, who was planning to meet with the United States secretary of state \u201cto take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation,\u201d went on to explain that \u201cwhile he fully comprehended that in this country, where caricatures of the highest public officials are every day fare in the press, no slight to the person of the Emperor was necessarily intended, yet in Japan a representation of the Emperor as engaged in the menial task of pulling a cart could not be understood or taken lightly.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " The Japanese ambassador, Hirosi Saito, who was planning to meet with the United States secretary of state \u201cto take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation,\u201d went on to explain that \u201cwhile he fully comprehended that in this country, where caricatures of the highest public officials are every day fare in the press, no slight to the person of the Emperor was necessarily intended, yet in Japan a representation of the Emperor as engaged in the menial task of pulling a cart could not be understood or taken lightly.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "The Japanese ambassador, Hirosi Saito, who was planning to meet with the United States secretary of state \u201cto take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation,\u201d went on to explain that \u201cwhile he fully comprehended that in this country, where caricatures of the highest public officials are every day fare in the press, no slight to the person of the Emperor was necessarily intended, yet in Japan a representation of the Emperor as engaged in the menial task of pulling a cart could not be understood or taken lightly.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The Japanese ambassador, Hirosi Saito, who was planning to meet with the United States secretary of state \u201cto take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation,\u201d went on to explain that \u201cwhile he fully comprehended that in this country, where caricatures of the highest public officials are every day fare in the press, no slight to the person of the Emperor was necessarily intended, yet in Japan a representation of the Emperor as engaged in the menial task of pulling a cart could not be understood or taken lightly.\u201d"} +{"question": "What was the purpose of the meeting?", "paragraph": "The Japanese ambassador, Hirosi Saito, who was planning to meet with the United States secretary of state \u201cto take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation,\u201d went on to explain that \u201cwhile he fully comprehended that in this country, where caricatures of the highest public officials are every day fare in the press, no slight to the person of the Emperor was necessarily intended, yet in Japan a representation of the Emperor as engaged in the menial task of pulling a cart could not be understood or taken lightly.\u201d", "answer": "to take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation,", "sentence": "The Japanese ambassador, Hirosi Saito, who was planning to meet with the United States secretary of state \u201c to take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation, \u201d went on to explain that \u201cwhile he fully comprehended that in this country, where caricatures of the highest public officials are every day fare in the press, no slight to the person of the Emperor was necessarily intended, yet in Japan a representation of the Emperor as engaged in the menial task of pulling a cart could not be understood or taken lightly.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " The Japanese ambassador, Hirosi Saito, who was planning to meet with the United States secretary of state \u201c to take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation, \u201d went on to explain that \u201cwhile he fully comprehended that in this country, where caricatures of the highest public officials are every day fare in the press, no slight to the person of the Emperor was necessarily intended, yet in Japan a representation of the Emperor as engaged in the menial task of pulling a cart could not be understood or taken lightly.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "The Japanese ambassador, Hirosi Saito, who was planning to meet with the United States secretary of state \u201c to take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation, \u201d went on to explain that \u201cwhile he fully comprehended that in this country, where caricatures of the highest public officials are every day fare in the press, no slight to the person of the Emperor was necessarily intended, yet in Japan a representation of the Emperor as engaged in the menial task of pulling a cart could not be understood or taken lightly.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The Japanese ambassador, Hirosi Saito, who was planning to meet with the United States secretary of state \u201c to take whatever action was possible to remedy the situation, \u201d went on to explain that \u201cwhile he fully comprehended that in this country, where caricatures of the highest public officials are every day fare in the press, no slight to the person of the Emperor was necessarily intended, yet in Japan a representation of the Emperor as engaged in the menial task of pulling a cart could not be understood or taken lightly.\u201d"} +{"question": "What is the name of the fair that combines art and design?", "paragraph": "The Salon Art + Design bills itself as a fair that combines art and design, echoing how people actually live \u2014 that is, with both art and furniture, rather than in sterile white cubes or furniture showrooms. It also sets out to reflect how architects and interior designers are behaving today, mixing historical periods and styles to achieve a casual, if studied, eclecticism. With that in mind, the fair runs the gamut from works that have made the rounds of museum shows to more experimental or even frivolous objects (which doesn\u2019t mean cheap ones). Following are highlights from some of the 55 galleries in the show.", "answer": "The Salon Art + Design", "sentence": "The Salon Art + Design bills itself as a fair that combines art and design, echoing how people actually live \u2014 that is, with both art and furniture, rather than in sterile white cubes or furniture showrooms.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Salon Art + Design bills itself as a fair that combines art and design, echoing how people actually live \u2014 that is, with both art and furniture, rather than in sterile white cubes or furniture showrooms. It also sets out to reflect how architects and interior designers are behaving today, mixing historical periods and styles to achieve a casual, if studied, eclecticism. With that in mind, the fair runs the gamut from works that have made the rounds of museum shows to more experimental or even frivolous objects (which doesn\u2019t mean cheap ones). Following are highlights from some of the 55 galleries in the show.", "paragraph_answer": " The Salon Art + Design bills itself as a fair that combines art and design, echoing how people actually live \u2014 that is, with both art and furniture, rather than in sterile white cubes or furniture showrooms. It also sets out to reflect how architects and interior designers are behaving today, mixing historical periods and styles to achieve a casual, if studied, eclecticism. With that in mind, the fair runs the gamut from works that have made the rounds of museum shows to more experimental or even frivolous objects (which doesn\u2019t mean cheap ones). Following are highlights from some of the 55 galleries in the show.", "sentence_answer": " The Salon Art + Design bills itself as a fair that combines art and design, echoing how people actually live \u2014 that is, with both art and furniture, rather than in sterile white cubes or furniture showrooms."} +{"question": "How many galleries are at the show?", "paragraph": "The Salon Art + Design bills itself as a fair that combines art and design, echoing how people actually live \u2014 that is, with both art and furniture, rather than in sterile white cubes or furniture showrooms. It also sets out to reflect how architects and interior designers are behaving today, mixing historical periods and styles to achieve a casual, if studied, eclecticism. With that in mind, the fair runs the gamut from works that have made the rounds of museum shows to more experimental or even frivolous objects (which doesn\u2019t mean cheap ones). Following are highlights from some of the 55 galleries in the show.", "answer": "55", "sentence": "Following are highlights from some of the 55 galleries in the show.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Salon Art + Design bills itself as a fair that combines art and design, echoing how people actually live \u2014 that is, with both art and furniture, rather than in sterile white cubes or furniture showrooms. It also sets out to reflect how architects and interior designers are behaving today, mixing historical periods and styles to achieve a casual, if studied, eclecticism. With that in mind, the fair runs the gamut from works that have made the rounds of museum shows to more experimental or even frivolous objects (which doesn\u2019t mean cheap ones). Following are highlights from some of the 55 galleries in the show. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Salon Art + Design bills itself as a fair that combines art and design, echoing how people actually live \u2014 that is, with both art and furniture, rather than in sterile white cubes or furniture showrooms. It also sets out to reflect how architects and interior designers are behaving today, mixing historical periods and styles to achieve a casual, if studied, eclecticism. With that in mind, the fair runs the gamut from works that have made the rounds of museum shows to more experimental or even frivolous objects (which doesn\u2019t mean cheap ones). Following are highlights from some of the 55 galleries in the show.", "sentence_answer": "Following are highlights from some of the 55 galleries in the show."} +{"question": "What is unique about the Salon Art + Design fair?", "paragraph": "The Salon Art + Design bills itself as a fair that combines art and design, echoing how people actually live \u2014 that is, with both art and furniture, rather than in sterile white cubes or furniture showrooms. It also sets out to reflect how architects and interior designers are behaving today, mixing historical periods and styles to achieve a casual, if studied, eclecticism. With that in mind, the fair runs the gamut from works that have made the rounds of museum shows to more experimental or even frivolous objects (which doesn\u2019t mean cheap ones). Following are highlights from some of the 55 galleries in the show.", "answer": "echoing how people actually live", "sentence": "The Salon Art + Design bills itself as a fair that combines art and design, echoing how people actually live \u2014 that is, with both art and furniture, rather than in sterile white cubes or furniture showrooms.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Salon Art + Design bills itself as a fair that combines art and design, echoing how people actually live \u2014 that is, with both art and furniture, rather than in sterile white cubes or furniture showrooms. It also sets out to reflect how architects and interior designers are behaving today, mixing historical periods and styles to achieve a casual, if studied, eclecticism. With that in mind, the fair runs the gamut from works that have made the rounds of museum shows to more experimental or even frivolous objects (which doesn\u2019t mean cheap ones). Following are highlights from some of the 55 galleries in the show.", "paragraph_answer": "The Salon Art + Design bills itself as a fair that combines art and design, echoing how people actually live \u2014 that is, with both art and furniture, rather than in sterile white cubes or furniture showrooms. It also sets out to reflect how architects and interior designers are behaving today, mixing historical periods and styles to achieve a casual, if studied, eclecticism. With that in mind, the fair runs the gamut from works that have made the rounds of museum shows to more experimental or even frivolous objects (which doesn\u2019t mean cheap ones). Following are highlights from some of the 55 galleries in the show.", "sentence_answer": "The Salon Art + Design bills itself as a fair that combines art and design, echoing how people actually live \u2014 that is, with both art and furniture, rather than in sterile white cubes or furniture showrooms."} +{"question": "What type of style is the fair trying to achieve casually?", "paragraph": "The Salon Art + Design bills itself as a fair that combines art and design, echoing how people actually live \u2014 that is, with both art and furniture, rather than in sterile white cubes or furniture showrooms. It also sets out to reflect how architects and interior designers are behaving today, mixing historical periods and styles to achieve a casual, if studied, eclecticism. With that in mind, the fair runs the gamut from works that have made the rounds of museum shows to more experimental or even frivolous objects (which doesn\u2019t mean cheap ones). Following are highlights from some of the 55 galleries in the show.", "answer": "eclecticism", "sentence": "It also sets out to reflect how architects and interior designers are behaving today, mixing historical periods and styles to achieve a casual, if studied, eclecticism .", "paragraph_sentence": "The Salon Art + Design bills itself as a fair that combines art and design, echoing how people actually live \u2014 that is, with both art and furniture, rather than in sterile white cubes or furniture showrooms. It also sets out to reflect how architects and interior designers are behaving today, mixing historical periods and styles to achieve a casual, if studied, eclecticism . With that in mind, the fair runs the gamut from works that have made the rounds of museum shows to more experimental or even frivolous objects (which doesn\u2019t mean cheap ones). Following are highlights from some of the 55 galleries in the show.", "paragraph_answer": "The Salon Art + Design bills itself as a fair that combines art and design, echoing how people actually live \u2014 that is, with both art and furniture, rather than in sterile white cubes or furniture showrooms. It also sets out to reflect how architects and interior designers are behaving today, mixing historical periods and styles to achieve a casual, if studied, eclecticism . With that in mind, the fair runs the gamut from works that have made the rounds of museum shows to more experimental or even frivolous objects (which doesn\u2019t mean cheap ones). Following are highlights from some of the 55 galleries in the show.", "sentence_answer": "It also sets out to reflect how architects and interior designers are behaving today, mixing historical periods and styles to achieve a casual, if studied, eclecticism ."} +{"question": "What is the name of the painting that is strikingly American version of Modernism?", "paragraph": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201cVenus and Adonis\u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri, Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "answer": "Venus and Adonis", "sentence": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201c Venus and Adonis \u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject.", "paragraph_sentence": " Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201c Venus and Adonis \u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri, Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "paragraph_answer": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201c Venus and Adonis \u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri, Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "sentence_answer": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201c Venus and Adonis \u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject."} +{"question": "From which gallery was Cadmus' work removed due to salacious depiction of sailors?", "paragraph": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201cVenus and Adonis\u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri, Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "answer": "Corcoran Gallery", "sentence": "Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors.", "paragraph_sentence": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201cVenus and Adonis\u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri, Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "paragraph_answer": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201cVenus and Adonis\u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri, Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "sentence_answer": "Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors."} +{"question": "Who painted Venus and Adonis?", "paragraph": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201cVenus and Adonis\u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri, Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "answer": "Paul Cadmus", "sentence": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus \u2019s painting \u201cVenus and Adonis\u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject.", "paragraph_sentence": " Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus \u2019s painting \u201cVenus and Adonis\u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri, Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "paragraph_answer": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus \u2019s painting \u201cVenus and Adonis\u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri, Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "sentence_answer": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus \u2019s painting \u201cVenus and Adonis\u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject."} +{"question": "Which part of the US Military had a Cadmus painting removed from a gallery?", "paragraph": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201cVenus and Adonis\u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri, Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "answer": "United States Navy", "sentence": "Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors.", "paragraph_sentence": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201cVenus and Adonis\u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri, Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "paragraph_answer": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201cVenus and Adonis\u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri, Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "sentence_answer": "Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors."} +{"question": "Who made a piece of art by taking a blowtorch to plastic?", "paragraph": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201cVenus and Adonis\u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri, Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "answer": "Alberto Burri", "sentence": "Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri , Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto.", "paragraph_sentence": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201cVenus and Adonis\u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri , Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "paragraph_answer": "Bernard Goldberg A strikingly American version of Modernism, Paul Cadmus\u2019s painting \u201cVenus and Adonis\u201d (1936) riffs on a Rubens canvas from the 1630s depicting the same subject. Exhibited in several museums, this is a relatively tame piece by Cadmus, whose work was removed from the Corcoran Gallery in Washington in the 1930s at the request of the United States Navy because of its salacious depiction of sailors. (Cadmus was one of the first publicly gay artists.) Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri , Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto. A diminutive 1966 red plastic work by Burri, made by taking a blowtorch to plastic, is like a miniature version of what is on view in the Burri show at the Guggenheim Museum. Several canvases with Fontana\u2019s signature slashes are joined by a recent Pistoletto mirror work that includes a flat image of a man on a telephone.", "sentence_answer": "Mazzoleni The surge of interest in masters of Italian Modernism is reflected at Mazzoleni, which is showing works by Alberto Burri , Lucio Fontana and Michelangelo Pistoletto."} +{"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."} +{"question": "Who is the craftsman that had a sofa on display at the Moderne Gallery of Philadelphia?", "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": "Wharton Esherick", "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."} +{"question": "Who created the \"Bolotas\" chairs?", "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": "Humberto and Fernando Campana", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "What is the goofiest object at Salon?", "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": "\u201cJungle V.I.P.\u201d chandelier", "sentence": "David Gill Arguably the goofiest object at Salon is the \u201cJungle V.I.P.\u201d chandelier from 2014, designed by Barnaby Barford.", "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": "David Gill Arguably the goofiest object at Salon is the \u201cJungle V.I.P.\u201d chandelier from 2014, designed by Barnaby Barford."} +{"question": "Who designed the \"Jungle V.I.P\" chandelier?", "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": "Barnaby Barford", "sentence": "David Gill Arguably the goofiest object at Salon is the \u201cJungle V.I.P.\u201d chandelier from 2014, designed by Barnaby Barford .", "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": "David Gill Arguably the goofiest object at Salon is the \u201cJungle V.I.P.\u201d chandelier from 2014, designed by Barnaby Barford ."} +{"question": "How long has Douglas elmendorf been in charge of the C.B.O?", "paragraph": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "answer": "six years", "sentence": "For the last six years , Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult.", "paragraph_sentence": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years , Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "paragraph_answer": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years , Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "sentence_answer": "For the last six years , Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult."} +{"question": "Who decided to put in a new person to be head of the C.B.O.?", "paragraph": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "answer": "Republican leadership", "sentence": "Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable.", "paragraph_sentence": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "paragraph_answer": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "sentence_answer": "Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable."} +{"question": "Besides being a friend, what is Elmendorf's relationship to the author?", "paragraph": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "answer": "former student", "sentence": "(Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective.", "paragraph_sentence": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "paragraph_answer": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "sentence_answer": "(Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective."} +{"question": "Who did Mr. Hall used to work for?", "paragraph": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "answer": "Bush administration", "sentence": "So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration , to be the new head of the budget office.", "paragraph_sentence": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration , to be the new head of the budget office. ", "paragraph_answer": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration , to be the new head of the budget office.", "sentence_answer": "So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration , to be the new head of the budget office."} +{"question": "What political party does Elmendorf have a past connection to?", "paragraph": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "answer": "Democrats", "sentence": "Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats , and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective.", "paragraph_sentence": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats , and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "paragraph_answer": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats , and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats , and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective."} +{"question": "For how long has Douglas Elmendorf been director of the C.B.O?", "paragraph": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "answer": "For the last six years", "sentence": "For the last six years , Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult.", "paragraph_sentence": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years , Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "paragraph_answer": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years , Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "sentence_answer": " For the last six years , Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult."} +{"question": "What has Douglas done a remarkable job of?", "paragraph": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "answer": "shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult", "sentence": "For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult .", "paragraph_sentence": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult . (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "paragraph_answer": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult . (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "sentence_answer": "For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult ."} +{"question": "What relationship is between Mr. Elmendorf and the author?", "paragraph": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "answer": "a friend and former student", "sentence": "(Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective.", "paragraph_sentence": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "paragraph_answer": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "sentence_answer": "(Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective."} +{"question": "What did the new Republican leadership in congress decide?", "paragraph": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "answer": "appoint someone new to head the C.B.O", "sentence": "Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O .", "paragraph_sentence": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O . That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "paragraph_answer": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O . That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "sentence_answer": "Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O ."} +{"question": "What did President Obama once say?", "paragraph": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "answer": "elections have consequences.", "sentence": "As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014.", "paragraph_sentence": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "paragraph_answer": "Let\u2019s start with some background. For the last six years, Douglas Elmendorf has been the director of the C.B.O. By my judgment, he has done a remarkable job of shepherding the institution through times that have been both economically and politically difficult. (Full disclosure: Mr. Elmendorf is a friend and former student of mine, so I am not entirely objective. But many prominent policy wonks endorsed his reappointment.) Nonetheless, the new Republican leadership in Congress decided to appoint someone new to head the C.B.O. That decision is entirely understandable. Mr. Elmendorf has a long affiliation with Democrats, and the Republicans want someone who shares more of their perspective. As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014. So, on Friday, congressional leaders appointed Mr. Hall, a veteran of the Bush administration, to be the new head of the budget office.", "sentence_answer": "As President Obama once said, elections have consequences. That includes the Republican sweep of 2014."} +{"question": "Who made a recent rule change?", "paragraph": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "answer": "House Republicans", "sentence": "House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy.", "paragraph_sentence": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "paragraph_answer": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "sentence_answer": " House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy."} +{"question": "What method does the Joint Committee on Taxation and C.B.O. currently use to grade potentional policy changes?", "paragraph": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "answer": "dynamic scoring", "sentence": "House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201c dynamic scoring \u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy.", "paragraph_sentence": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201c dynamic scoring \u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "paragraph_answer": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201c dynamic scoring \u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "sentence_answer": "House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201c dynamic scoring \u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy."} +{"question": "The process that makes the assumption that G.D.P. stays static when the government impliments spending or changes tax law is called what?", "paragraph": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "answer": "static scoring", "sentence": "Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring , which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending.", "paragraph_sentence": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring , which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "paragraph_answer": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring , which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "sentence_answer": "Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring , which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending."} +{"question": "Who is now in charge of the C.B.O?", "paragraph": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "answer": "Mr. Hall\u2019s", "sentence": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s", "paragraph_sentence": " We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "paragraph_answer": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "sentence_answer": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s"} +{"question": "What's known of Mr. Hall's leadership?", "paragraph": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "answer": "he will face a big challenge", "sentence": "but we do know that he will face a big challenge .", "paragraph_sentence": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge . House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "paragraph_answer": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge . House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "sentence_answer": "but we do know that he will face a big challenge ."} +{"question": "What have House Republicans recently done?", "paragraph": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "answer": "changed the rules", "sentence": "House Republicans have recently changed the rules : The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy.", "paragraph_sentence": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules : The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "paragraph_answer": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules : The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "sentence_answer": "House Republicans have recently changed the rules : The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy."} +{"question": "What do new rules require when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy", "paragraph": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "answer": "dynamic scoring", "sentence": "House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201c dynamic scoring \u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy.", "paragraph_sentence": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201c dynamic scoring \u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "paragraph_answer": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201c dynamic scoring \u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "sentence_answer": "House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201c dynamic scoring \u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy."} +{"question": "What has used a process called static scoring until now?", "paragraph": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "answer": "conventional budget analysis", "sentence": "Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending.", "paragraph_sentence": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "paragraph_answer": "We don\u2019t yet know how Mr. Hall\u2019s leadership will differ from Mr. Elmendorf\u2019s but we do know that he will face a big challenge. House Republicans have recently changed the rules: The Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation are now required to use \u201cdynamic scoring\u201d when evaluating major changes in tax and spending policy. This is the can of worms that awaits Mr. Hall as he takes on his new job. Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending. This procedure has the virtues of simplicity and transparency.", "sentence_answer": "Until now, conventional budget analysis has used a process called static scoring, which assumes that the path of gross domestic product remains the same when the government changes taxes or spending."} +{"question": "What is the drawback of the assumption of unchanged GDP?", "paragraph": "Yet the assumption of unchanged G.D.P. also has one notable drawback: It is patently false. Much economic theory and empirical research confirm that fiscal policy influences the course of the economy. Indeed, having an economic impact is a big part of why policy makers use the tools at their disposal, whether it is the tax cuts of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush or the stimulus package of Mr. Obama. It seems somehow churlish for Congress\u2019s economists to assume that a policy change won\u2019t accomplish its goal simply to make their jobs easier. Moreover, static scoring biases the analysis of proposed policy changes. If a tax cut promotes growth, for example, it will lose less revenue than an estimate based on unchanged G.D.P. suggests. For most cases, this effect is not large enough to make tax cuts pay for themselves, but it often makes tax cuts less costly than they first appear.", "answer": "It is patently false.", "sentence": "Yet the assumption of unchanged G.D.P. also has one notable drawback: It is patently false. Much economic theory and empirical research confirm that fiscal policy influences the course of the economy.", "paragraph_sentence": " Yet the assumption of unchanged G.D.P. also has one notable drawback: It is patently false. Much economic theory and empirical research confirm that fiscal policy influences the course of the economy. Indeed, having an economic impact is a big part of why policy makers use the tools at their disposal, whether it is the tax cuts of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush or the stimulus package of Mr. Obama. It seems somehow churlish for Congress\u2019s economists to assume that a policy change won\u2019t accomplish its goal simply to make their jobs easier. Moreover, static scoring biases the analysis of proposed policy changes. If a tax cut promotes growth, for example, it will lose less revenue than an estimate based on unchanged G.D.P. suggests. For most cases, this effect is not large enough to make tax cuts pay for themselves, but it often makes tax cuts less costly than they first appear.", "paragraph_answer": "Yet the assumption of unchanged G.D.P. also has one notable drawback: It is patently false. Much economic theory and empirical research confirm that fiscal policy influences the course of the economy. Indeed, having an economic impact is a big part of why policy makers use the tools at their disposal, whether it is the tax cuts of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush or the stimulus package of Mr. Obama. It seems somehow churlish for Congress\u2019s economists to assume that a policy change won\u2019t accomplish its goal simply to make their jobs easier. Moreover, static scoring biases the analysis of proposed policy changes. If a tax cut promotes growth, for example, it will lose less revenue than an estimate based on unchanged G.D.P. suggests. For most cases, this effect is not large enough to make tax cuts pay for themselves, but it often makes tax cuts less costly than they first appear.", "sentence_answer": "Yet the assumption of unchanged G.D.P. also has one notable drawback: It is patently false. Much economic theory and empirical research confirm that fiscal policy influences the course of the economy."} +{"question": "What do economic theory and empirical research confirm?", "paragraph": "Yet the assumption of unchanged G.D.P. also has one notable drawback: It is patently false. Much economic theory and empirical research confirm that fiscal policy influences the course of the economy. Indeed, having an economic impact is a big part of why policy makers use the tools at their disposal, whether it is the tax cuts of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush or the stimulus package of Mr. Obama. It seems somehow churlish for Congress\u2019s economists to assume that a policy change won\u2019t accomplish its goal simply to make their jobs easier. Moreover, static scoring biases the analysis of proposed policy changes. If a tax cut promotes growth, for example, it will lose less revenue than an estimate based on unchanged G.D.P. suggests. For most cases, this effect is not large enough to make tax cuts pay for themselves, but it often makes tax cuts less costly than they first appear.", "answer": "fiscal policy influences the course of the economy", "sentence": "that fiscal policy influences the course of the economy .", "paragraph_sentence": "Yet the assumption of unchanged G.D.P. also has one notable drawback: It is patently false. Much economic theory and empirical research confirm that fiscal policy influences the course of the economy . Indeed, having an economic impact is a big part of why policy makers use the tools at their disposal, whether it is the tax cuts of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush or the stimulus package of Mr. Obama. It seems somehow churlish for Congress\u2019s economists to assume that a policy change won\u2019t accomplish its goal simply to make their jobs easier. Moreover, static scoring biases the analysis of proposed policy changes. If a tax cut promotes growth, for example, it will lose less revenue than an estimate based on unchanged G.D.P. suggests. For most cases, this effect is not large enough to make tax cuts pay for themselves, but it often makes tax cuts less costly than they first appear.", "paragraph_answer": "Yet the assumption of unchanged G.D.P. also has one notable drawback: It is patently false. Much economic theory and empirical research confirm that fiscal policy influences the course of the economy . Indeed, having an economic impact is a big part of why policy makers use the tools at their disposal, whether it is the tax cuts of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush or the stimulus package of Mr. Obama. It seems somehow churlish for Congress\u2019s economists to assume that a policy change won\u2019t accomplish its goal simply to make their jobs easier. Moreover, static scoring biases the analysis of proposed policy changes. If a tax cut promotes growth, for example, it will lose less revenue than an estimate based on unchanged G.D.P. suggests. For most cases, this effect is not large enough to make tax cuts pay for themselves, but it often makes tax cuts less costly than they first appear.", "sentence_answer": "that fiscal policy influences the course of the economy ."} +{"question": "What is a big part of why policy makers use the tools at their disposal?", "paragraph": "Yet the assumption of unchanged G.D.P. also has one notable drawback: It is patently false. Much economic theory and empirical research confirm that fiscal policy influences the course of the economy. Indeed, having an economic impact is a big part of why policy makers use the tools at their disposal, whether it is the tax cuts of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush or the stimulus package of Mr. Obama. It seems somehow churlish for Congress\u2019s economists to assume that a policy change won\u2019t accomplish its goal simply to make their jobs easier. Moreover, static scoring biases the analysis of proposed policy changes. If a tax cut promotes growth, for example, it will lose less revenue than an estimate based on unchanged G.D.P. suggests. For most cases, this effect is not large enough to make tax cuts pay for themselves, but it often makes tax cuts less costly than they first appear.", "answer": "having an economic impact", "sentence": "Indeed, having an economic impact is a big part of why policy makers use the tools at their disposal, whether it is the tax cuts of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush or the stimulus package of Mr. Obama.", "paragraph_sentence": "Yet the assumption of unchanged G.D.P. also has one notable drawback: It is patently false. Much economic theory and empirical research confirm that fiscal policy influences the course of the economy. Indeed, having an economic impact is a big part of why policy makers use the tools at their disposal, whether it is the tax cuts of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush or the stimulus package of Mr. Obama. It seems somehow churlish for Congress\u2019s economists to assume that a policy change won\u2019t accomplish its goal simply to make their jobs easier. Moreover, static scoring biases the analysis of proposed policy changes. If a tax cut promotes growth, for example, it will lose less revenue than an estimate based on unchanged G.D.P. suggests. For most cases, this effect is not large enough to make tax cuts pay for themselves, but it often makes tax cuts less costly than they first appear.", "paragraph_answer": "Yet the assumption of unchanged G.D.P. also has one notable drawback: It is patently false. Much economic theory and empirical research confirm that fiscal policy influences the course of the economy. Indeed, having an economic impact is a big part of why policy makers use the tools at their disposal, whether it is the tax cuts of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush or the stimulus package of Mr. Obama. It seems somehow churlish for Congress\u2019s economists to assume that a policy change won\u2019t accomplish its goal simply to make their jobs easier. Moreover, static scoring biases the analysis of proposed policy changes. If a tax cut promotes growth, for example, it will lose less revenue than an estimate based on unchanged G.D.P. suggests. For most cases, this effect is not large enough to make tax cuts pay for themselves, but it often makes tax cuts less costly than they first appear.", "sentence_answer": "Indeed, having an economic impact is a big part of why policy makers use the tools at their disposal, whether it is the tax cuts of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush or the stimulus package of Mr. Obama."} +{"question": "What does static scoring bias?", "paragraph": "Yet the assumption of unchanged G.D.P. also has one notable drawback: It is patently false. Much economic theory and empirical research confirm that fiscal policy influences the course of the economy. Indeed, having an economic impact is a big part of why policy makers use the tools at their disposal, whether it is the tax cuts of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush or the stimulus package of Mr. Obama. It seems somehow churlish for Congress\u2019s economists to assume that a policy change won\u2019t accomplish its goal simply to make their jobs easier. Moreover, static scoring biases the analysis of proposed policy changes. If a tax cut promotes growth, for example, it will lose less revenue than an estimate based on unchanged G.D.P. suggests. For most cases, this effect is not large enough to make tax cuts pay for themselves, but it often makes tax cuts less costly than they first appear.", "answer": "the analysis of proposed policy changes", "sentence": "Moreover, static scoring biases the analysis of proposed policy changes .", "paragraph_sentence": "Yet the assumption of unchanged G.D.P. also has one notable drawback: It is patently false. Much economic theory and empirical research confirm that fiscal policy influences the course of the economy. Indeed, having an economic impact is a big part of why policy makers use the tools at their disposal, whether it is the tax cuts of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush or the stimulus package of Mr. Obama. It seems somehow churlish for Congress\u2019s economists to assume that a policy change won\u2019t accomplish its goal simply to make their jobs easier. Moreover, static scoring biases the analysis of proposed policy changes . If a tax cut promotes growth, for example, it will lose less revenue than an estimate based on unchanged G.D.P. suggests. For most cases, this effect is not large enough to make tax cuts pay for themselves, but it often makes tax cuts less costly than they first appear.", "paragraph_answer": "Yet the assumption of unchanged G.D.P. also has one notable drawback: It is patently false. Much economic theory and empirical research confirm that fiscal policy influences the course of the economy. Indeed, having an economic impact is a big part of why policy makers use the tools at their disposal, whether it is the tax cuts of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush or the stimulus package of Mr. Obama. It seems somehow churlish for Congress\u2019s economists to assume that a policy change won\u2019t accomplish its goal simply to make their jobs easier. Moreover, static scoring biases the analysis of proposed policy changes . If a tax cut promotes growth, for example, it will lose less revenue than an estimate based on unchanged G.D.P. suggests. For most cases, this effect is not large enough to make tax cuts pay for themselves, but it often makes tax cuts less costly than they first appear.", "sentence_answer": "Moreover, static scoring biases the analysis of proposed policy changes ."} +{"question": "What's more important in analyzing the biases inherent in static scoring?", "paragraph": "Perhaps more important, the biases inherent in static scoring are not the same for all possible policy changes, making comparison of alternative options less reliable. For example, suppose one member of Congress proposes a cut in the corporate tax rate, while another proposes an increase in the child tax credit to help middle-income families. Because the corporate tax is often considered one of the most distortionary taxes in the federal arsenal, cutting it would promote economic growth. The true cost of the tax cut, as estimated by dynamic scoring, would most likely be much less than its static score.", "answer": "are not the same for all possible policy changes, making comparison of alternative options less reliable", "sentence": "Perhaps more important, the biases inherent in static scoring are not the same for all possible policy changes, making comparison of alternative options less reliable .", "paragraph_sentence": " Perhaps more important, the biases inherent in static scoring are not the same for all possible policy changes, making comparison of alternative options less reliable . For example, suppose one member of Congress proposes a cut in the corporate tax rate, while another proposes an increase in the child tax credit to help middle-income families. Because the corporate tax is often considered one of the most distortionary taxes in the federal arsenal, cutting it would promote economic growth. The true cost of the tax cut, as estimated by dynamic scoring, would most likely be much less than its static score.", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps more important, the biases inherent in static scoring are not the same for all possible policy changes, making comparison of alternative options less reliable . For example, suppose one member of Congress proposes a cut in the corporate tax rate, while another proposes an increase in the child tax credit to help middle-income families. Because the corporate tax is often considered one of the most distortionary taxes in the federal arsenal, cutting it would promote economic growth. The true cost of the tax cut, as estimated by dynamic scoring, would most likely be much less than its static score.", "sentence_answer": "Perhaps more important, the biases inherent in static scoring are not the same for all possible policy changes, making comparison of alternative options less reliable ."} +{"question": "Why would cutting corporate tax promote economic growth?", "paragraph": "Perhaps more important, the biases inherent in static scoring are not the same for all possible policy changes, making comparison of alternative options less reliable. For example, suppose one member of Congress proposes a cut in the corporate tax rate, while another proposes an increase in the child tax credit to help middle-income families. Because the corporate tax is often considered one of the most distortionary taxes in the federal arsenal, cutting it would promote economic growth. The true cost of the tax cut, as estimated by dynamic scoring, would most likely be much less than its static score.", "answer": "Because the corporate tax is often considered one of the most distortionary taxes", "sentence": "Because the corporate tax is often considered one of the most distortionary taxes in the federal arsenal, cutting it would promote economic growth.", "paragraph_sentence": "Perhaps more important, the biases inherent in static scoring are not the same for all possible policy changes, making comparison of alternative options less reliable. For example, suppose one member of Congress proposes a cut in the corporate tax rate, while another proposes an increase in the child tax credit to help middle-income families. Because the corporate tax is often considered one of the most distortionary taxes in the federal arsenal, cutting it would promote economic growth. The true cost of the tax cut, as estimated by dynamic scoring, would most likely be much less than its static score.", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps more important, the biases inherent in static scoring are not the same for all possible policy changes, making comparison of alternative options less reliable. For example, suppose one member of Congress proposes a cut in the corporate tax rate, while another proposes an increase in the child tax credit to help middle-income families. Because the corporate tax is often considered one of the most distortionary taxes in the federal arsenal, cutting it would promote economic growth. The true cost of the tax cut, as estimated by dynamic scoring, would most likely be much less than its static score.", "sentence_answer": " Because the corporate tax is often considered one of the most distortionary taxes in the federal arsenal, cutting it would promote economic growth."} +{"question": "What would be the true cost of the tax cut?", "paragraph": "Perhaps more important, the biases inherent in static scoring are not the same for all possible policy changes, making comparison of alternative options less reliable. For example, suppose one member of Congress proposes a cut in the corporate tax rate, while another proposes an increase in the child tax credit to help middle-income families. Because the corporate tax is often considered one of the most distortionary taxes in the federal arsenal, cutting it would promote economic growth. The true cost of the tax cut, as estimated by dynamic scoring, would most likely be much less than its static score.", "answer": "would most likely be much less than its static score", "sentence": "The true cost of the tax cut, as estimated by dynamic scoring, would most likely be much less than its static score .", "paragraph_sentence": "Perhaps more important, the biases inherent in static scoring are not the same for all possible policy changes, making comparison of alternative options less reliable. For example, suppose one member of Congress proposes a cut in the corporate tax rate, while another proposes an increase in the child tax credit to help middle-income families. Because the corporate tax is often considered one of the most distortionary taxes in the federal arsenal, cutting it would promote economic growth. The true cost of the tax cut, as estimated by dynamic scoring, would most likely be much less than its static score . ", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps more important, the biases inherent in static scoring are not the same for all possible policy changes, making comparison of alternative options less reliable. For example, suppose one member of Congress proposes a cut in the corporate tax rate, while another proposes an increase in the child tax credit to help middle-income families. Because the corporate tax is often considered one of the most distortionary taxes in the federal arsenal, cutting it would promote economic growth. The true cost of the tax cut, as estimated by dynamic scoring, would most likely be much less than its static score .", "sentence_answer": "The true cost of the tax cut, as estimated by dynamic scoring, would most likely be much less than its static score ."} +{"question": "What inconsistencies do biases inherent in static scoring have?", "paragraph": "Perhaps more important, the biases inherent in static scoring are not the same for all possible policy changes, making comparison of alternative options less reliable. For example, suppose one member of Congress proposes a cut in the corporate tax rate, while another proposes an increase in the child tax credit to help middle-income families. Because the corporate tax is often considered one of the most distortionary taxes in the federal arsenal, cutting it would promote economic growth. The true cost of the tax cut, as estimated by dynamic scoring, would most likely be much less than its static score.", "answer": "are not the same for all possible policy changes,", "sentence": "Perhaps more important, the biases inherent in static scoring are not the same for all possible policy changes, making comparison of alternative options less reliable.", "paragraph_sentence": " Perhaps more important, the biases inherent in static scoring are not the same for all possible policy changes, making comparison of alternative options less reliable. For example, suppose one member of Congress proposes a cut in the corporate tax rate, while another proposes an increase in the child tax credit to help middle-income families. Because the corporate tax is often considered one of the most distortionary taxes in the federal arsenal, cutting it would promote economic growth. The true cost of the tax cut, as estimated by dynamic scoring, would most likely be much less than its static score.", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps more important, the biases inherent in static scoring are not the same for all possible policy changes, making comparison of alternative options less reliable. For example, suppose one member of Congress proposes a cut in the corporate tax rate, while another proposes an increase in the child tax credit to help middle-income families. Because the corporate tax is often considered one of the most distortionary taxes in the federal arsenal, cutting it would promote economic growth. The true cost of the tax cut, as estimated by dynamic scoring, would most likely be much less than its static score.", "sentence_answer": "Perhaps more important, the biases inherent in static scoring are not the same for all possible policy changes, making comparison of alternative options less reliable."} +{"question": "Where is the Clinton Correctional Facility located?", "paragraph": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York. He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder, searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "answer": "in northern New York", "sentence": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York .", "paragraph_sentence": " Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York . He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder, searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "paragraph_answer": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York . He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder, searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "sentence_answer": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York ."} +{"question": "What was beneath the prison?", "paragraph": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York. He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder, searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "answer": "catacomb-like tunnels", "sentence": "He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder, searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep.", "paragraph_sentence": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York. He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder, searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "paragraph_answer": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York. He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder, searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "sentence_answer": "He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder, searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep."} +{"question": "How long did it take David Sweat to saw a hole at the back of his cell?", "paragraph": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York. He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder, searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "answer": "months", "sentence": "Night after night for months , David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York.", "paragraph_sentence": " Night after night for months , David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York. He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder, searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "paragraph_answer": "Night after night for months , David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York. He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder, searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "sentence_answer": "Night after night for months , David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York."} +{"question": "Why was David Sweat in prison?", "paragraph": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York. He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder, searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "answer": "murder", "sentence": "He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder , searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep.", "paragraph_sentence": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York. He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder , searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "paragraph_answer": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York. He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder , searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "sentence_answer": "He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder , searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep."} +{"question": "What did David Sweat create?", "paragraph": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York. He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder, searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "answer": "subterranean route out.", "sentence": "They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "paragraph_sentence": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York. He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder, searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life. ", "paragraph_answer": "Night after night for months, David Sweat slipped through a hole he had sawed at the back of his cell in the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York. He would plumb the catacomb-like tunnels beneath the prison, where he was serving a life sentence for murder, searching for an escape route, confident that the guards would have no idea he was gone because they were asleep. Then he would return to his empty bunk. His explorations began this past winter and continued through the spring. They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life.", "sentence_answer": "They took him underground almost every night for hours until he finally stumbled on what would become, through trial and error and countless hours of grueling work, his subterranean route out. Mr. Sweat felt free during his nightly journeys into the maze, as though he had already escaped the ugliness of his day-to-day prison life."} +{"question": "How old was Mr. Sweat?", "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": "35,", "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."} +{"question": "What human qualities were needed to execute the daring escape?", "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": "patience, timing, determination and physical strength", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What was Mr. Sweat trying to cut through?", "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": "concrete wall", "sentence": "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_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": "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."} +{"question": "What bothered Mr. Sweat while he was trying to cut through the concrete wall?", "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": "heat from steam pipes", "sentence": "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_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": "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."} +{"question": "How many days later from the escape was Mr. Sweat discovered?", "paragraph": "Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border. He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running, the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "answer": "Two days later", "sentence": "Two days later , a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border.", "paragraph_sentence": " Two days later , a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border. He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running, the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "paragraph_answer": " Two days later , a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border. He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running, the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "sentence_answer": " Two days later , a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border."} +{"question": "Next to which country's border was Mr. Sweat caught?", "paragraph": "Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border. He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running, the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "answer": "Canadian border", "sentence": "Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border .", "paragraph_sentence": " Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border . He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running, the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "paragraph_answer": "Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border . He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running, the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "sentence_answer": "Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border ."} +{"question": "How far away from the Canadian border was Mr. Sweat when he was caught by the police?", "paragraph": "Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border. He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running, the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "answer": "mile and a half", "sentence": "Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border.", "paragraph_sentence": " Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border. He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running, the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "paragraph_answer": "Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border. He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running, the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "sentence_answer": "Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border."} +{"question": "Did Mr. Sweat surrender when he was ordered to stop running?", "paragraph": "Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border. He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running, the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "answer": "prisoner refused his order to stop running", "sentence": "He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running , the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border. He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running , the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "paragraph_answer": "Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border. He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running , the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "sentence_answer": "He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running , the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said."} +{"question": "How many times was Mr. Sweat shot?", "paragraph": "Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border. He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running, the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "answer": "twice", "sentence": "He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running, the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border. He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running, the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "paragraph_answer": "Two days later, a state police sergeant happened upon Mr. Sweat on a rural road a mile and a half from the Canadian border. He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running, the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said. Mr. Sweat provided the account to investigators from the State Police, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, and the State Inspector General\u2019s Office during several sessions in recent weeks, according to the people briefed on his statements. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the investigation. The escape, the manhunt and the resulting spectacle proved to be an embarrassment for the Corrections Department and the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.", "sentence_answer": "He chased him into an open field, and when the prisoner refused his order to stop running, the sergeant, a firearms instructor, dropped to one knee and fired, striking him twice from a distance of more than 50 yards with a .45-caliber pistol, two people briefed on the shooting said."} +{"question": "What is being reviewed?", "paragraph": "The investigation, and a review of the corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures at Clinton by the office of the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, is continuing. Mr. Sweat\u2019s account, along with interviews of corrections officers and prison officials, documents and reviews of other evidence, will no doubt play a significant role in determining what went wrong at the prison and within the culture of the agency. An initial investigation led to the arrest of Ms. Mitchell. The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie, accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison. The superintendent at Clinton, two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers were also placed on administrative leave, according to prison agency officials, who said the superintendent was expected to retire at the end of July.", "answer": "corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures", "sentence": "The investigation, and a review of the corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures at Clinton by the office of the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, is continuing.", "paragraph_sentence": " The investigation, and a review of the corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures at Clinton by the office of the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, is continuing. Mr. Sweat\u2019s account, along with interviews of corrections officers and prison officials, documents and reviews of other evidence, will no doubt play a significant role in determining what went wrong at the prison and within the culture of the agency. An initial investigation led to the arrest of Ms. Mitchell. The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie, accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison. The superintendent at Clinton, two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers were also placed on administrative leave, according to prison agency officials, who said the superintendent was expected to retire at the end of July.", "paragraph_answer": "The investigation, and a review of the corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures at Clinton by the office of the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, is continuing. Mr. Sweat\u2019s account, along with interviews of corrections officers and prison officials, documents and reviews of other evidence, will no doubt play a significant role in determining what went wrong at the prison and within the culture of the agency. An initial investigation led to the arrest of Ms. Mitchell. The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie, accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison. The superintendent at Clinton, two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers were also placed on administrative leave, according to prison agency officials, who said the superintendent was expected to retire at the end of July.", "sentence_answer": "The investigation, and a review of the corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures at Clinton by the office of the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, is continuing."} +{"question": "Who was arrested after the initial investigation?", "paragraph": "The investigation, and a review of the corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures at Clinton by the office of the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, is continuing. Mr. Sweat\u2019s account, along with interviews of corrections officers and prison officials, documents and reviews of other evidence, will no doubt play a significant role in determining what went wrong at the prison and within the culture of the agency. An initial investigation led to the arrest of Ms. Mitchell. The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie, accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison. The superintendent at Clinton, two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers were also placed on administrative leave, according to prison agency officials, who said the superintendent was expected to retire at the end of July.", "answer": "Ms. Mitchell.", "sentence": "An initial investigation led to the arrest of Ms. Mitchell. The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie, accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison.", "paragraph_sentence": "The investigation, and a review of the corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures at Clinton by the office of the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, is continuing. Mr. Sweat\u2019s account, along with interviews of corrections officers and prison officials, documents and reviews of other evidence, will no doubt play a significant role in determining what went wrong at the prison and within the culture of the agency. An initial investigation led to the arrest of Ms. Mitchell. The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie, accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison. The superintendent at Clinton, two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers were also placed on administrative leave, according to prison agency officials, who said the superintendent was expected to retire at the end of July.", "paragraph_answer": "The investigation, and a review of the corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures at Clinton by the office of the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, is continuing. Mr. Sweat\u2019s account, along with interviews of corrections officers and prison officials, documents and reviews of other evidence, will no doubt play a significant role in determining what went wrong at the prison and within the culture of the agency. An initial investigation led to the arrest of Ms. Mitchell. The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie, accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison. The superintendent at Clinton, two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers were also placed on administrative leave, according to prison agency officials, who said the superintendent was expected to retire at the end of July.", "sentence_answer": "An initial investigation led to the arrest of Ms. Mitchell. The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie, accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison."} +{"question": "Who is the Clinton County district attorney?", "paragraph": "The investigation, and a review of the corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures at Clinton by the office of the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, is continuing. Mr. Sweat\u2019s account, along with interviews of corrections officers and prison officials, documents and reviews of other evidence, will no doubt play a significant role in determining what went wrong at the prison and within the culture of the agency. An initial investigation led to the arrest of Ms. Mitchell. The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie, accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison. The superintendent at Clinton, two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers were also placed on administrative leave, according to prison agency officials, who said the superintendent was expected to retire at the end of July.", "answer": "Andrew M. Wylie", "sentence": "The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie , accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison.", "paragraph_sentence": "The investigation, and a review of the corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures at Clinton by the office of the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, is continuing. Mr. Sweat\u2019s account, along with interviews of corrections officers and prison officials, documents and reviews of other evidence, will no doubt play a significant role in determining what went wrong at the prison and within the culture of the agency. An initial investigation led to the arrest of Ms. Mitchell. The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie , accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison. The superintendent at Clinton, two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers were also placed on administrative leave, according to prison agency officials, who said the superintendent was expected to retire at the end of July.", "paragraph_answer": "The investigation, and a review of the corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures at Clinton by the office of the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, is continuing. Mr. Sweat\u2019s account, along with interviews of corrections officers and prison officials, documents and reviews of other evidence, will no doubt play a significant role in determining what went wrong at the prison and within the culture of the agency. An initial investigation led to the arrest of Ms. Mitchell. The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie , accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison. The superintendent at Clinton, two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers were also placed on administrative leave, according to prison agency officials, who said the superintendent was expected to retire at the end of July.", "sentence_answer": "The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie , accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison."} +{"question": "What was Ms. Mitchell accused of?", "paragraph": "The investigation, and a review of the corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures at Clinton by the office of the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, is continuing. Mr. Sweat\u2019s account, along with interviews of corrections officers and prison officials, documents and reviews of other evidence, will no doubt play a significant role in determining what went wrong at the prison and within the culture of the agency. An initial investigation led to the arrest of Ms. Mitchell. The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie, accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison. The superintendent at Clinton, two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers were also placed on administrative leave, according to prison agency officials, who said the superintendent was expected to retire at the end of July.", "answer": "smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison", "sentence": "The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie, accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison .", "paragraph_sentence": "The investigation, and a review of the corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures at Clinton by the office of the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, is continuing. Mr. Sweat\u2019s account, along with interviews of corrections officers and prison officials, documents and reviews of other evidence, will no doubt play a significant role in determining what went wrong at the prison and within the culture of the agency. An initial investigation led to the arrest of Ms. Mitchell. The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie, accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison . The superintendent at Clinton, two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers were also placed on administrative leave, according to prison agency officials, who said the superintendent was expected to retire at the end of July.", "paragraph_answer": "The investigation, and a review of the corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures at Clinton by the office of the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, is continuing. Mr. Sweat\u2019s account, along with interviews of corrections officers and prison officials, documents and reviews of other evidence, will no doubt play a significant role in determining what went wrong at the prison and within the culture of the agency. An initial investigation led to the arrest of Ms. Mitchell. The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie, accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison . The superintendent at Clinton, two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers were also placed on administrative leave, according to prison agency officials, who said the superintendent was expected to retire at the end of July.", "sentence_answer": "The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie, accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison ."} +{"question": "How many staff members of the correctional facility were placed on administrative leave?", "paragraph": "The investigation, and a review of the corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures at Clinton by the office of the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, is continuing. Mr. Sweat\u2019s account, along with interviews of corrections officers and prison officials, documents and reviews of other evidence, will no doubt play a significant role in determining what went wrong at the prison and within the culture of the agency. An initial investigation led to the arrest of Ms. Mitchell. The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie, accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison. The superintendent at Clinton, two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers were also placed on administrative leave, according to prison agency officials, who said the superintendent was expected to retire at the end of July.", "answer": "two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers", "sentence": "The superintendent at Clinton, two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers were also placed on administrative leave, according to prison agency officials, who said the superintendent was expected to retire at the end of July.", "paragraph_sentence": "The investigation, and a review of the corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures at Clinton by the office of the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, is continuing. Mr. Sweat\u2019s account, along with interviews of corrections officers and prison officials, documents and reviews of other evidence, will no doubt play a significant role in determining what went wrong at the prison and within the culture of the agency. An initial investigation led to the arrest of Ms. Mitchell. The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie, accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison. The superintendent at Clinton, two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers were also placed on administrative leave, according to prison agency officials, who said the superintendent was expected to retire at the end of July. ", "paragraph_answer": "The investigation, and a review of the corrections agency\u2019s policies and procedures at Clinton by the office of the state inspector general, Catherine Leahy Scott, is continuing. Mr. Sweat\u2019s account, along with interviews of corrections officers and prison officials, documents and reviews of other evidence, will no doubt play a significant role in determining what went wrong at the prison and within the culture of the agency. An initial investigation led to the arrest of Ms. Mitchell. The charges, brought by the Clinton County district attorney, Andrew M. Wylie, accused her of smuggling hacksaw blades, chisels and other tools into the prison. The superintendent at Clinton, two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers were also placed on administrative leave, according to prison agency officials, who said the superintendent was expected to retire at the end of July.", "sentence_answer": "The superintendent at Clinton, two senior members of his staff and nine correction officers were also placed on administrative leave, according to prison agency officials, who said the superintendent was expected to retire at the end of July."} +{"question": "What did Mr. Sweat compare his escape to?", "paragraph": "Like many who followed the prison break, Mr. Sweat and Mr. Matt could not help but compare their efforts to the escape in \u201cThe Shawshank Redemption.\u201d Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne, the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years.", "answer": "escape in \u201cThe Shawshank Redemption.", "sentence": "Like many who followed the prison break, Mr. Sweat and Mr. Matt could not help but compare their efforts to the escape in \u201cThe Shawshank Redemption. \u201d Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne, the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years.", "paragraph_sentence": " Like many who followed the prison break, Mr. Sweat and Mr. Matt could not help but compare their efforts to the escape in \u201cThe Shawshank Redemption. \u201d Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne, the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years. ", "paragraph_answer": "Like many who followed the prison break, Mr. Sweat and Mr. Matt could not help but compare their efforts to the escape in \u201cThe Shawshank Redemption. \u201d Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne, the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years.", "sentence_answer": "Like many who followed the prison break, Mr. Sweat and Mr. Matt could not help but compare their efforts to the escape in \u201cThe Shawshank Redemption. \u201d Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne, the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years."} +{"question": "Who was Mr. Sweat's partner in the escape?", "paragraph": "Like many who followed the prison break, Mr. Sweat and Mr. Matt could not help but compare their efforts to the escape in \u201cThe Shawshank Redemption.\u201d Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne, the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years.", "answer": "Mr. Matt", "sentence": "Like many who followed the prison break, Mr. Sweat and Mr. Matt could not help but compare their efforts to the escape in \u201cThe Shawshank Redemption.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Like many who followed the prison break, Mr. Sweat and Mr. Matt could not help but compare their efforts to the escape in \u201cThe Shawshank Redemption.\u201d Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne, the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years.", "paragraph_answer": "Like many who followed the prison break, Mr. Sweat and Mr. Matt could not help but compare their efforts to the escape in \u201cThe Shawshank Redemption.\u201d Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne, the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years.", "sentence_answer": "Like many who followed the prison break, Mr. Sweat and Mr. Matt could not help but compare their efforts to the escape in \u201cThe Shawshank Redemption.\u201d"} +{"question": "Who did Tim Robbins play in Shawshank Redemption?", "paragraph": "Like many who followed the prison break, Mr. Sweat and Mr. Matt could not help but compare their efforts to the escape in \u201cThe Shawshank Redemption.\u201d Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne, the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years.", "answer": "Andy Dufresne", "sentence": "Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne , the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years.", "paragraph_sentence": "Like many who followed the prison break, Mr. Sweat and Mr. Matt could not help but compare their efforts to the escape in \u201cThe Shawshank Redemption.\u201d Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne , the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years. ", "paragraph_answer": "Like many who followed the prison break, Mr. Sweat and Mr. Matt could not help but compare their efforts to the escape in \u201cThe Shawshank Redemption.\u201d Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne , the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years.", "sentence_answer": "Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne , the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years."} +{"question": "How long did it take Andy Dufresne to escape?", "paragraph": "Like many who followed the prison break, Mr. Sweat and Mr. Matt could not help but compare their efforts to the escape in \u201cThe Shawshank Redemption.\u201d Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne, the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years.", "answer": "20 years", "sentence": "Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne, the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years.", "paragraph_sentence": "Like many who followed the prison break, Mr. Sweat and Mr. Matt could not help but compare their efforts to the escape in \u201cThe Shawshank Redemption.\u201d Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne, the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years. ", "paragraph_answer": "Like many who followed the prison break, Mr. Sweat and Mr. Matt could not help but compare their efforts to the escape in \u201cThe Shawshank Redemption.\u201d Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne, the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years.", "sentence_answer": "Indeed, Mr. Sweat told investigators that he and Mr. Matt had joked that while it had taken Andy Dufresne, the character in the movie played by Tim Robbins, 20 years to escape, it would take them only 10 years."} +{"question": "Where will people avoid going once they have insurance?", "paragraph": "There\u2019s an oft-expressed view that getting all those people covered could actually save the health system money. The argument goes something like this: Once people have insurance, they\u2019ll go to the doctor instead of an expensive emergency room. Or: Prevention costs far less than a serious illness down the road. In selling the Affordable Care Act, President Obama was fond of making these sorts of arguments. \u201cThere\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t be catching diseases like breast cancer and colon cancer before they get worse,\u201d he said, in his big 2009 address to Congress, urging passage of the bill. \u201cThat makes sense, it saves money, and it saves lives.\u201d The White House was careful to describe the overall financial forecast for the law \u2014 the administration said the law would slow spending growth and not reverse it. But it has also argued forcefully and repeatedly about the financial value of preventive care.", "answer": "emergency room", "sentence": "The argument goes something like this: Once people have insurance, they\u2019ll go to the doctor instead of an expensive emergency room .", "paragraph_sentence": "There\u2019s an oft-expressed view that getting all those people covered could actually save the health system money. The argument goes something like this: Once people have insurance, they\u2019ll go to the doctor instead of an expensive emergency room . Or: Prevention costs far less than a serious illness down the road. In selling the Affordable Care Act, President Obama was fond of making these sorts of arguments. \u201cThere\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t be catching diseases like breast cancer and colon cancer before they get worse,\u201d he said, in his big 2009 address to Congress, urging passage of the bill. \u201cThat makes sense, it saves money, and it saves lives.\u201d The White House was careful to describe the overall financial forecast for the law \u2014 the administration said the law would slow spending growth and not reverse it. But it has also argued forcefully and repeatedly about the financial value of preventive care.", "paragraph_answer": "There\u2019s an oft-expressed view that getting all those people covered could actually save the health system money. The argument goes something like this: Once people have insurance, they\u2019ll go to the doctor instead of an expensive emergency room . Or: Prevention costs far less than a serious illness down the road. In selling the Affordable Care Act, President Obama was fond of making these sorts of arguments. \u201cThere\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t be catching diseases like breast cancer and colon cancer before they get worse,\u201d he said, in his big 2009 address to Congress, urging passage of the bill. \u201cThat makes sense, it saves money, and it saves lives.\u201d The White House was careful to describe the overall financial forecast for the law \u2014 the administration said the law would slow spending growth and not reverse it. But it has also argued forcefully and repeatedly about the financial value of preventive care.", "sentence_answer": "The argument goes something like this: Once people have insurance, they\u2019ll go to the doctor instead of an expensive emergency room ."} +{"question": "When did Obama insist Congress pass the Affordable Care Act?", "paragraph": "There\u2019s an oft-expressed view that getting all those people covered could actually save the health system money. The argument goes something like this: Once people have insurance, they\u2019ll go to the doctor instead of an expensive emergency room. Or: Prevention costs far less than a serious illness down the road. In selling the Affordable Care Act, President Obama was fond of making these sorts of arguments. \u201cThere\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t be catching diseases like breast cancer and colon cancer before they get worse,\u201d he said, in his big 2009 address to Congress, urging passage of the bill. \u201cThat makes sense, it saves money, and it saves lives.\u201d The White House was careful to describe the overall financial forecast for the law \u2014 the administration said the law would slow spending growth and not reverse it. But it has also argued forcefully and repeatedly about the financial value of preventive care.", "answer": "2009", "sentence": "\u201cThere\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t be catching diseases like breast cancer and colon cancer before they get worse,\u201d he said, in his big 2009 address to Congress, urging passage of the bill.", "paragraph_sentence": "There\u2019s an oft-expressed view that getting all those people covered could actually save the health system money. The argument goes something like this: Once people have insurance, they\u2019ll go to the doctor instead of an expensive emergency room. Or: Prevention costs far less than a serious illness down the road. In selling the Affordable Care Act, President Obama was fond of making these sorts of arguments. \u201cThere\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t be catching diseases like breast cancer and colon cancer before they get worse,\u201d he said, in his big 2009 address to Congress, urging passage of the bill. \u201cThat makes sense, it saves money, and it saves lives.\u201d The White House was careful to describe the overall financial forecast for the law \u2014 the administration said the law would slow spending growth and not reverse it. But it has also argued forcefully and repeatedly about the financial value of preventive care.", "paragraph_answer": "There\u2019s an oft-expressed view that getting all those people covered could actually save the health system money. The argument goes something like this: Once people have insurance, they\u2019ll go to the doctor instead of an expensive emergency room. Or: Prevention costs far less than a serious illness down the road. In selling the Affordable Care Act, President Obama was fond of making these sorts of arguments. \u201cThere\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t be catching diseases like breast cancer and colon cancer before they get worse,\u201d he said, in his big 2009 address to Congress, urging passage of the bill. \u201cThat makes sense, it saves money, and it saves lives.\u201d The White House was careful to describe the overall financial forecast for the law \u2014 the administration said the law would slow spending growth and not reverse it. But it has also argued forcefully and repeatedly about the financial value of preventive care.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThere\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t be catching diseases like breast cancer and colon cancer before they get worse,\u201d he said, in his big 2009 address to Congress, urging passage of the bill."} +{"question": "What did Obama say may happen if one catches a disease before it gets worse?", "paragraph": "There\u2019s an oft-expressed view that getting all those people covered could actually save the health system money. The argument goes something like this: Once people have insurance, they\u2019ll go to the doctor instead of an expensive emergency room. Or: Prevention costs far less than a serious illness down the road. In selling the Affordable Care Act, President Obama was fond of making these sorts of arguments. \u201cThere\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t be catching diseases like breast cancer and colon cancer before they get worse,\u201d he said, in his big 2009 address to Congress, urging passage of the bill. \u201cThat makes sense, it saves money, and it saves lives.\u201d The White House was careful to describe the overall financial forecast for the law \u2014 the administration said the law would slow spending growth and not reverse it. But it has also argued forcefully and repeatedly about the financial value of preventive care.", "answer": "saves money, and it saves lives", "sentence": "\u201cThat makes sense, it saves money, and it saves lives .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "There\u2019s an oft-expressed view that getting all those people covered could actually save the health system money. The argument goes something like this: Once people have insurance, they\u2019ll go to the doctor instead of an expensive emergency room. Or: Prevention costs far less than a serious illness down the road. In selling the Affordable Care Act, President Obama was fond of making these sorts of arguments. \u201cThere\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t be catching diseases like breast cancer and colon cancer before they get worse,\u201d he said, in his big 2009 address to Congress, urging passage of the bill. \u201cThat makes sense, it saves money, and it saves lives .\u201d The White House was careful to describe the overall financial forecast for the law \u2014 the administration said the law would slow spending growth and not reverse it. But it has also argued forcefully and repeatedly about the financial value of preventive care.", "paragraph_answer": "There\u2019s an oft-expressed view that getting all those people covered could actually save the health system money. The argument goes something like this: Once people have insurance, they\u2019ll go to the doctor instead of an expensive emergency room. Or: Prevention costs far less than a serious illness down the road. In selling the Affordable Care Act, President Obama was fond of making these sorts of arguments. \u201cThere\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t be catching diseases like breast cancer and colon cancer before they get worse,\u201d he said, in his big 2009 address to Congress, urging passage of the bill. \u201cThat makes sense, it saves money, and it saves lives .\u201d The White House was careful to describe the overall financial forecast for the law \u2014 the administration said the law would slow spending growth and not reverse it. But it has also argued forcefully and repeatedly about the financial value of preventive care.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThat makes sense, it saves money, and it saves lives .\u201d"} +{"question": "During which event did Obama tell Congress to pass a bill?", "paragraph": "There\u2019s an oft-expressed view that getting all those people covered could actually save the health system money. The argument goes something like this: Once people have insurance, they\u2019ll go to the doctor instead of an expensive emergency room. Or: Prevention costs far less than a serious illness down the road. In selling the Affordable Care Act, President Obama was fond of making these sorts of arguments. \u201cThere\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t be catching diseases like breast cancer and colon cancer before they get worse,\u201d he said, in his big 2009 address to Congress, urging passage of the bill. \u201cThat makes sense, it saves money, and it saves lives.\u201d The White House was careful to describe the overall financial forecast for the law \u2014 the administration said the law would slow spending growth and not reverse it. But it has also argued forcefully and repeatedly about the financial value of preventive care.", "answer": "2009 address", "sentence": "\u201cThere\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t be catching diseases like breast cancer and colon cancer before they get worse,\u201d he said, in his big 2009 address to Congress, urging passage of the bill.", "paragraph_sentence": "There\u2019s an oft-expressed view that getting all those people covered could actually save the health system money. The argument goes something like this: Once people have insurance, they\u2019ll go to the doctor instead of an expensive emergency room. Or: Prevention costs far less than a serious illness down the road. In selling the Affordable Care Act, President Obama was fond of making these sorts of arguments. \u201cThere\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t be catching diseases like breast cancer and colon cancer before they get worse,\u201d he said, in his big 2009 address to Congress, urging passage of the bill. \u201cThat makes sense, it saves money, and it saves lives.\u201d The White House was careful to describe the overall financial forecast for the law \u2014 the administration said the law would slow spending growth and not reverse it. But it has also argued forcefully and repeatedly about the financial value of preventive care.", "paragraph_answer": "There\u2019s an oft-expressed view that getting all those people covered could actually save the health system money. The argument goes something like this: Once people have insurance, they\u2019ll go to the doctor instead of an expensive emergency room. Or: Prevention costs far less than a serious illness down the road. In selling the Affordable Care Act, President Obama was fond of making these sorts of arguments. \u201cThere\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t be catching diseases like breast cancer and colon cancer before they get worse,\u201d he said, in his big 2009 address to Congress, urging passage of the bill. \u201cThat makes sense, it saves money, and it saves lives.\u201d The White House was careful to describe the overall financial forecast for the law \u2014 the administration said the law would slow spending growth and not reverse it. But it has also argued forcefully and repeatedly about the financial value of preventive care.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThere\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t be catching diseases like breast cancer and colon cancer before they get worse,\u201d he said, in his big 2009 address to Congress, urging passage of the bill."} +{"question": "What did the White House describe would not happen to economic growth?", "paragraph": "There\u2019s an oft-expressed view that getting all those people covered could actually save the health system money. The argument goes something like this: Once people have insurance, they\u2019ll go to the doctor instead of an expensive emergency room. Or: Prevention costs far less than a serious illness down the road. In selling the Affordable Care Act, President Obama was fond of making these sorts of arguments. \u201cThere\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t be catching diseases like breast cancer and colon cancer before they get worse,\u201d he said, in his big 2009 address to Congress, urging passage of the bill. \u201cThat makes sense, it saves money, and it saves lives.\u201d The White House was careful to describe the overall financial forecast for the law \u2014 the administration said the law would slow spending growth and not reverse it. But it has also argued forcefully and repeatedly about the financial value of preventive care.", "answer": "reverse it", "sentence": "The White House was careful to describe the overall financial forecast for the law \u2014 the administration said the law would slow spending growth and not reverse it .", "paragraph_sentence": "There\u2019s an oft-expressed view that getting all those people covered could actually save the health system money. The argument goes something like this: Once people have insurance, they\u2019ll go to the doctor instead of an expensive emergency room. Or: Prevention costs far less than a serious illness down the road. In selling the Affordable Care Act, President Obama was fond of making these sorts of arguments. \u201cThere\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t be catching diseases like breast cancer and colon cancer before they get worse,\u201d he said, in his big 2009 address to Congress, urging passage of the bill. \u201cThat makes sense, it saves money, and it saves lives.\u201d The White House was careful to describe the overall financial forecast for the law \u2014 the administration said the law would slow spending growth and not reverse it . But it has also argued forcefully and repeatedly about the financial value of preventive care.", "paragraph_answer": "There\u2019s an oft-expressed view that getting all those people covered could actually save the health system money. The argument goes something like this: Once people have insurance, they\u2019ll go to the doctor instead of an expensive emergency room. Or: Prevention costs far less than a serious illness down the road. In selling the Affordable Care Act, President Obama was fond of making these sorts of arguments. \u201cThere\u2019s no reason we shouldn\u2019t be catching diseases like breast cancer and colon cancer before they get worse,\u201d he said, in his big 2009 address to Congress, urging passage of the bill. \u201cThat makes sense, it saves money, and it saves lives.\u201d The White House was careful to describe the overall financial forecast for the law \u2014 the administration said the law would slow spending growth and not reverse it . But it has also argued forcefully and repeatedly about the financial value of preventive care.", "sentence_answer": "The White House was careful to describe the overall financial forecast for the law \u2014 the administration said the law would slow spending growth and not reverse it ."} +{"question": "Who spends more money on medical care than people without health insurance?", "paragraph": "This argument for the cost savings from universal health coverage makes some intuitive sense, but it\u2019s wrong. There\u2019s strong evidence from a variety of sources that people who have health insurance spend more on medical care than people who don\u2019t. It also turns out that almost all preventive health care costs more than it saves. Those facts don\u2019t mean that giving people health insurance is a waste of money, since those dollars spent may improve their health and financial security. But there are only a few situations in which giving someone more health care will actually end up saving money.", "answer": "people who have health insurance", "sentence": "that people who have health insurance spend more on medical care than people who don\u2019t.", "paragraph_sentence": "This argument for the cost savings from universal health coverage makes some intuitive sense, but it\u2019s wrong. There\u2019s strong evidence from a variety of sources that people who have health insurance spend more on medical care than people who don\u2019t. It also turns out that almost all preventive health care costs more than it saves. Those facts don\u2019t mean that giving people health insurance is a waste of money, since those dollars spent may improve their health and financial security. But there are only a few situations in which giving someone more health care will actually end up saving money.", "paragraph_answer": "This argument for the cost savings from universal health coverage makes some intuitive sense, but it\u2019s wrong. There\u2019s strong evidence from a variety of sources that people who have health insurance spend more on medical care than people who don\u2019t. It also turns out that almost all preventive health care costs more than it saves. Those facts don\u2019t mean that giving people health insurance is a waste of money, since those dollars spent may improve their health and financial security. But there are only a few situations in which giving someone more health care will actually end up saving money.", "sentence_answer": "that people who have health insurance spend more on medical care than people who don\u2019t."} +{"question": "What may health insurance provide for people?", "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": "may improve their health and financial security", "sentence": "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 .", "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": "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 ."} +{"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."} +{"question": "In how many situations does giving someone health care actually end up saving money?", "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": "only a few", "sentence": "But there are only a few situations in which giving someone more health care will actually end up saving money.", "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": "But there are only a few situations in which giving someone more health care will actually end up saving money."} +{"question": "What will preventive services not be allowed to charge under Obamacare?", "paragraph": "But what about prevention? In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks, reducing future spending. Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments. You might expect health spending to jump initially, then slow in future years as people benefit from new prevention. But research shows that even preventive care rarely ends up saving money.", "answer": "co-payments", "sentence": "Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments .", "paragraph_sentence": "But what about prevention? In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks, reducing future spending. Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments . You might expect health spending to jump initially, then slow in future years as people benefit from new prevention. But research shows that even preventive care rarely ends up saving money.", "paragraph_answer": "But what about prevention? In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks, reducing future spending. Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments . You might expect health spending to jump initially, then slow in future years as people benefit from new prevention. But research shows that even preventive care rarely ends up saving money.", "sentence_answer": "Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments ."} +{"question": "What does research demonstrate about preventive care?", "paragraph": "But what about prevention? In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks, reducing future spending. Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments. You might expect health spending to jump initially, then slow in future years as people benefit from new prevention. But research shows that even preventive care rarely ends up saving money.", "answer": "rarely ends up saving money", "sentence": "But research shows that even preventive care rarely ends up saving money .", "paragraph_sentence": "But what about prevention? In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks, reducing future spending. Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments. You might expect health spending to jump initially, then slow in future years as people benefit from new prevention. But research shows that even preventive care rarely ends up saving money . ", "paragraph_answer": "But what about prevention? In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks, reducing future spending. Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments. You might expect health spending to jump initially, then slow in future years as people benefit from new prevention. But research shows that even preventive care rarely ends up saving money .", "sentence_answer": "But research shows that even preventive care rarely ends up saving money ."} +{"question": "What can sometimes happen when early spending on health matters?", "paragraph": "But what about prevention? In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks, reducing future spending. Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments. You might expect health spending to jump initially, then slow in future years as people benefit from new prevention. But research shows that even preventive care rarely ends up saving money.", "answer": "will stop an expensive disease in its tracks", "sentence": "In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks , reducing future spending.", "paragraph_sentence": "But what about prevention? In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks , reducing future spending. Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments. You might expect health spending to jump initially, then slow in future years as people benefit from new prevention. But research shows that even preventive care rarely ends up saving money.", "paragraph_answer": "But what about prevention? In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks , reducing future spending. Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments. You might expect health spending to jump initially, then slow in future years as people benefit from new prevention. But research shows that even preventive care rarely ends up saving money.", "sentence_answer": "In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks , reducing future spending."} +{"question": "What does giving people health insurance allow for?", "paragraph": "But what about prevention? In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks, reducing future spending. Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments. You might expect health spending to jump initially, then slow in future years as people benefit from new prevention. But research shows that even preventive care rarely ends up saving money.", "answer": "enables them to get just this sort of preventive care", "sentence": "Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments.", "paragraph_sentence": "But what about prevention? In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks, reducing future spending. Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments. You might expect health spending to jump initially, then slow in future years as people benefit from new prevention. But research shows that even preventive care rarely ends up saving money.", "paragraph_answer": "But what about prevention? In certain situations, early spending on someone\u2019s health will stop an expensive disease in its tracks, reducing future spending. Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments. You might expect health spending to jump initially, then slow in future years as people benefit from new prevention. But research shows that even preventive care rarely ends up saving money.", "sentence_answer": "Giving people health insurance often enables them to get just this sort of preventive care \u2014 and Obamacare requires insurers to offer most preventive services without charging any co-payments."} +{"question": "What type of screening can prevent a heart attack?", "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": "cholesterol screening", "sentence": "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": "a cholesterol screening , to give one example, that blood test is a cost-saver."} +{"question": "How many people need to be tested in order for a single heart attack to be prevented?", "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": "hundreds", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"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."} +{"question": "How many years would about one hundred people need to be given cholesterol lowering drugs for the prevention of one heart attack?", "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": "five years", "sentence": "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 .", "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": "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 ."} +{"question": "What saves more money in the long run than pregnancy?", "paragraph": "There\u2019s also the unavoidable fact that every time you prevent people from dying from one disease, they are likely to live longer and incur future medical expenses. The patient who benefits from the cholesterol screening may go on to develop cancer, arthritis, Alzheimer\u2019s or some other costly illness. There are some prevention measures that actually do seem to save money. Counseling on contraception is one because the costs of prenatal care, delivery and pediatric care associated with an unplanned pregnancy are so substantial. But a lot of the preventive health measures that we tend to value a lot \u2014 mammography, screening for diabetes \u2014 tend to cost more than they save. Researchers like Mr. Cohen, who study these trade-offs, say we need to think more broadly about the value of what our preventive spending buys, not the narrow question of whether it saves money.", "answer": "contraception", "sentence": "Counseling on contraception is one because the costs of prenatal care, delivery and pediatric care associated with an unplanned pregnancy are so substantial.", "paragraph_sentence": "There\u2019s also the unavoidable fact that every time you prevent people from dying from one disease, they are likely to live longer and incur future medical expenses. The patient who benefits from the cholesterol screening may go on to develop cancer, arthritis, Alzheimer\u2019s or some other costly illness. There are some prevention measures that actually do seem to save money. Counseling on contraception is one because the costs of prenatal care, delivery and pediatric care associated with an unplanned pregnancy are so substantial. But a lot of the preventive health measures that we tend to value a lot \u2014 mammography, screening for diabetes \u2014 tend to cost more than they save. Researchers like Mr. Cohen, who study these trade-offs, say we need to think more broadly about the value of what our preventive spending buys, not the narrow question of whether it saves money.", "paragraph_answer": "There\u2019s also the unavoidable fact that every time you prevent people from dying from one disease, they are likely to live longer and incur future medical expenses. The patient who benefits from the cholesterol screening may go on to develop cancer, arthritis, Alzheimer\u2019s or some other costly illness. There are some prevention measures that actually do seem to save money. Counseling on contraception is one because the costs of prenatal care, delivery and pediatric care associated with an unplanned pregnancy are so substantial. But a lot of the preventive health measures that we tend to value a lot \u2014 mammography, screening for diabetes \u2014 tend to cost more than they save. Researchers like Mr. Cohen, who study these trade-offs, say we need to think more broadly about the value of what our preventive spending buys, not the narrow question of whether it saves money.", "sentence_answer": "Counseling on contraception is one because the costs of prenatal care, delivery and pediatric care associated with an unplanned pregnancy are so substantial."} +{"question": "Besides mammography, what is another thing that costs more than is saved?", "paragraph": "There\u2019s also the unavoidable fact that every time you prevent people from dying from one disease, they are likely to live longer and incur future medical expenses. The patient who benefits from the cholesterol screening may go on to develop cancer, arthritis, Alzheimer\u2019s or some other costly illness. There are some prevention measures that actually do seem to save money. Counseling on contraception is one because the costs of prenatal care, delivery and pediatric care associated with an unplanned pregnancy are so substantial. But a lot of the preventive health measures that we tend to value a lot \u2014 mammography, screening for diabetes \u2014 tend to cost more than they save. Researchers like Mr. Cohen, who study these trade-offs, say we need to think more broadly about the value of what our preventive spending buys, not the narrow question of whether it saves money.", "answer": "screening for diabetes", "sentence": "But a lot of the preventive health measures that we tend to value a lot \u2014 mammography, screening for diabetes \u2014 tend to cost more than they save.", "paragraph_sentence": "There\u2019s also the unavoidable fact that every time you prevent people from dying from one disease, they are likely to live longer and incur future medical expenses. The patient who benefits from the cholesterol screening may go on to develop cancer, arthritis, Alzheimer\u2019s or some other costly illness. There are some prevention measures that actually do seem to save money. Counseling on contraception is one because the costs of prenatal care, delivery and pediatric care associated with an unplanned pregnancy are so substantial. But a lot of the preventive health measures that we tend to value a lot \u2014 mammography, screening for diabetes \u2014 tend to cost more than they save. Researchers like Mr. Cohen, who study these trade-offs, say we need to think more broadly about the value of what our preventive spending buys, not the narrow question of whether it saves money.", "paragraph_answer": "There\u2019s also the unavoidable fact that every time you prevent people from dying from one disease, they are likely to live longer and incur future medical expenses. The patient who benefits from the cholesterol screening may go on to develop cancer, arthritis, Alzheimer\u2019s or some other costly illness. There are some prevention measures that actually do seem to save money. Counseling on contraception is one because the costs of prenatal care, delivery and pediatric care associated with an unplanned pregnancy are so substantial. But a lot of the preventive health measures that we tend to value a lot \u2014 mammography, screening for diabetes \u2014 tend to cost more than they save. Researchers like Mr. Cohen, who study these trade-offs, say we need to think more broadly about the value of what our preventive spending buys, not the narrow question of whether it saves money.", "sentence_answer": "But a lot of the preventive health measures that we tend to value a lot \u2014 mammography, screening for diabetes \u2014 tend to cost more than they save."} +{"question": "What may happen even if one person is saved from a disease?", "paragraph": "There\u2019s also the unavoidable fact that every time you prevent people from dying from one disease, they are likely to live longer and incur future medical expenses. The patient who benefits from the cholesterol screening may go on to develop cancer, arthritis, Alzheimer\u2019s or some other costly illness. There are some prevention measures that actually do seem to save money. Counseling on contraception is one because the costs of prenatal care, delivery and pediatric care associated with an unplanned pregnancy are so substantial. But a lot of the preventive health measures that we tend to value a lot \u2014 mammography, screening for diabetes \u2014 tend to cost more than they save. Researchers like Mr. Cohen, who study these trade-offs, say we need to think more broadly about the value of what our preventive spending buys, not the narrow question of whether it saves money.", "answer": "they are likely to live longer and incur future medical expenses", "sentence": "There\u2019s also the unavoidable fact that every time you prevent people from dying from one disease, they are likely to live longer and incur future medical expenses .", "paragraph_sentence": " There\u2019s also the unavoidable fact that every time you prevent people from dying from one disease, they are likely to live longer and incur future medical expenses . The patient who benefits from the cholesterol screening may go on to develop cancer, arthritis, Alzheimer\u2019s or some other costly illness. There are some prevention measures that actually do seem to save money. Counseling on contraception is one because the costs of prenatal care, delivery and pediatric care associated with an unplanned pregnancy are so substantial. But a lot of the preventive health measures that we tend to value a lot \u2014 mammography, screening for diabetes \u2014 tend to cost more than they save. Researchers like Mr. Cohen, who study these trade-offs, say we need to think more broadly about the value of what our preventive spending buys, not the narrow question of whether it saves money.", "paragraph_answer": "There\u2019s also the unavoidable fact that every time you prevent people from dying from one disease, they are likely to live longer and incur future medical expenses . The patient who benefits from the cholesterol screening may go on to develop cancer, arthritis, Alzheimer\u2019s or some other costly illness. There are some prevention measures that actually do seem to save money. Counseling on contraception is one because the costs of prenatal care, delivery and pediatric care associated with an unplanned pregnancy are so substantial. But a lot of the preventive health measures that we tend to value a lot \u2014 mammography, screening for diabetes \u2014 tend to cost more than they save. Researchers like Mr. Cohen, who study these trade-offs, say we need to think more broadly about the value of what our preventive spending buys, not the narrow question of whether it saves money.", "sentence_answer": "There\u2019s also the unavoidable fact that every time you prevent people from dying from one disease, they are likely to live longer and incur future medical expenses ."} +{"question": "Who studies the financial factors of preventive care?", "paragraph": "There\u2019s also the unavoidable fact that every time you prevent people from dying from one disease, they are likely to live longer and incur future medical expenses. The patient who benefits from the cholesterol screening may go on to develop cancer, arthritis, Alzheimer\u2019s or some other costly illness. There are some prevention measures that actually do seem to save money. Counseling on contraception is one because the costs of prenatal care, delivery and pediatric care associated with an unplanned pregnancy are so substantial. But a lot of the preventive health measures that we tend to value a lot \u2014 mammography, screening for diabetes \u2014 tend to cost more than they save. Researchers like Mr. Cohen, who study these trade-offs, say we need to think more broadly about the value of what our preventive spending buys, not the narrow question of whether it saves money.", "answer": "Mr. Cohen", "sentence": "Researchers like Mr. Cohen , who study these trade-offs, say we need to think more broadly about the value of what our preventive spending buys, not the narrow question of whether it saves money.", "paragraph_sentence": "There\u2019s also the unavoidable fact that every time you prevent people from dying from one disease, they are likely to live longer and incur future medical expenses. The patient who benefits from the cholesterol screening may go on to develop cancer, arthritis, Alzheimer\u2019s or some other costly illness. There are some prevention measures that actually do seem to save money. Counseling on contraception is one because the costs of prenatal care, delivery and pediatric care associated with an unplanned pregnancy are so substantial. But a lot of the preventive health measures that we tend to value a lot \u2014 mammography, screening for diabetes \u2014 tend to cost more than they save. Researchers like Mr. Cohen , who study these trade-offs, say we need to think more broadly about the value of what our preventive spending buys, not the narrow question of whether it saves money. ", "paragraph_answer": "There\u2019s also the unavoidable fact that every time you prevent people from dying from one disease, they are likely to live longer and incur future medical expenses. The patient who benefits from the cholesterol screening may go on to develop cancer, arthritis, Alzheimer\u2019s or some other costly illness. There are some prevention measures that actually do seem to save money. Counseling on contraception is one because the costs of prenatal care, delivery and pediatric care associated with an unplanned pregnancy are so substantial. But a lot of the preventive health measures that we tend to value a lot \u2014 mammography, screening for diabetes \u2014 tend to cost more than they save. Researchers like Mr. Cohen , who study these trade-offs, say we need to think more broadly about the value of what our preventive spending buys, not the narrow question of whether it saves money.", "sentence_answer": "Researchers like Mr. Cohen , who study these trade-offs, say we need to think more broadly about the value of what our preventive spending buys, not the narrow question of whether it saves money."} +{"question": "What does early research show of those with new coverage?", "paragraph": "That may be one way of thinking about the law\u2019s benefits for the newly insured, who had limited access to the health care system. For many, their new coverage means they can get free checkups and preventive disease screenings, and can more easily pay for big health care needs, like prescription drugs and operations. Early evidence suggests they are facing less financial stress as a result of their coverage. Some are now managing chronic and potentially life-threatening health conditions. But those benefits don\u2019t mean we should be surprised by the actuaries\u2019 recent findings on spending growth. More people in the health care system means more dollars spent on health care. The increase doesn\u2019t mean that Obamacare is leading to runaway costs, or that it\u2019s failing to reform the health care system to make it more efficient. But it does mean that we can\u2019t think of the coverage expansion as free.", "answer": "they are facing less financial stress", "sentence": "Early evidence suggests they are facing less financial stress as a result of their coverage.", "paragraph_sentence": "That may be one way of thinking about the law\u2019s benefits for the newly insured, who had limited access to the health care system. For many, their new coverage means they can get free checkups and preventive disease screenings, and can more easily pay for big health care needs, like prescription drugs and operations. Early evidence suggests they are facing less financial stress as a result of their coverage. Some are now managing chronic and potentially life-threatening health conditions. But those benefits don\u2019t mean we should be surprised by the actuaries\u2019 recent findings on spending growth. More people in the health care system means more dollars spent on health care. The increase doesn\u2019t mean that Obamacare is leading to runaway costs, or that it\u2019s failing to reform the health care system to make it more efficient. But it does mean that we can\u2019t think of the coverage expansion as free.", "paragraph_answer": "That may be one way of thinking about the law\u2019s benefits for the newly insured, who had limited access to the health care system. For many, their new coverage means they can get free checkups and preventive disease screenings, and can more easily pay for big health care needs, like prescription drugs and operations. Early evidence suggests they are facing less financial stress as a result of their coverage. Some are now managing chronic and potentially life-threatening health conditions. But those benefits don\u2019t mean we should be surprised by the actuaries\u2019 recent findings on spending growth. More people in the health care system means more dollars spent on health care. The increase doesn\u2019t mean that Obamacare is leading to runaway costs, or that it\u2019s failing to reform the health care system to make it more efficient. But it does mean that we can\u2019t think of the coverage expansion as free.", "sentence_answer": "Early evidence suggests they are facing less financial stress as a result of their coverage."} +{"question": "What type of screenings can the newly insured receive?", "paragraph": "That may be one way of thinking about the law\u2019s benefits for the newly insured, who had limited access to the health care system. For many, their new coverage means they can get free checkups and preventive disease screenings, and can more easily pay for big health care needs, like prescription drugs and operations. Early evidence suggests they are facing less financial stress as a result of their coverage. Some are now managing chronic and potentially life-threatening health conditions. But those benefits don\u2019t mean we should be surprised by the actuaries\u2019 recent findings on spending growth. More people in the health care system means more dollars spent on health care. The increase doesn\u2019t mean that Obamacare is leading to runaway costs, or that it\u2019s failing to reform the health care system to make it more efficient. But it does mean that we can\u2019t think of the coverage expansion as free.", "answer": "preventive disease screenings", "sentence": "For many, their new coverage means they can get free checkups and preventive disease screenings , and can more easily pay for big health care needs, like prescription drugs and operations.", "paragraph_sentence": "That may be one way of thinking about the law\u2019s benefits for the newly insured, who had limited access to the health care system. For many, their new coverage means they can get free checkups and preventive disease screenings , and can more easily pay for big health care needs, like prescription drugs and operations. Early evidence suggests they are facing less financial stress as a result of their coverage. Some are now managing chronic and potentially life-threatening health conditions. But those benefits don\u2019t mean we should be surprised by the actuaries\u2019 recent findings on spending growth. More people in the health care system means more dollars spent on health care. The increase doesn\u2019t mean that Obamacare is leading to runaway costs, or that it\u2019s failing to reform the health care system to make it more efficient. But it does mean that we can\u2019t think of the coverage expansion as free.", "paragraph_answer": "That may be one way of thinking about the law\u2019s benefits for the newly insured, who had limited access to the health care system. For many, their new coverage means they can get free checkups and preventive disease screenings , and can more easily pay for big health care needs, like prescription drugs and operations. Early evidence suggests they are facing less financial stress as a result of their coverage. Some are now managing chronic and potentially life-threatening health conditions. But those benefits don\u2019t mean we should be surprised by the actuaries\u2019 recent findings on spending growth. More people in the health care system means more dollars spent on health care. The increase doesn\u2019t mean that Obamacare is leading to runaway costs, or that it\u2019s failing to reform the health care system to make it more efficient. But it does mean that we can\u2019t think of the coverage expansion as free.", "sentence_answer": "For many, their new coverage means they can get free checkups and preventive disease screenings , and can more easily pay for big health care needs, like prescription drugs and operations."} +{"question": "What happens when more people are part of the health care system?", "paragraph": "That may be one way of thinking about the law\u2019s benefits for the newly insured, who had limited access to the health care system. For many, their new coverage means they can get free checkups and preventive disease screenings, and can more easily pay for big health care needs, like prescription drugs and operations. Early evidence suggests they are facing less financial stress as a result of their coverage. Some are now managing chronic and potentially life-threatening health conditions. But those benefits don\u2019t mean we should be surprised by the actuaries\u2019 recent findings on spending growth. More people in the health care system means more dollars spent on health care. The increase doesn\u2019t mean that Obamacare is leading to runaway costs, or that it\u2019s failing to reform the health care system to make it more efficient. But it does mean that we can\u2019t think of the coverage expansion as free.", "answer": "more dollars spent on health care", "sentence": "More people in the health care system means more dollars spent on health care .", "paragraph_sentence": "That may be one way of thinking about the law\u2019s benefits for the newly insured, who had limited access to the health care system. For many, their new coverage means they can get free checkups and preventive disease screenings, and can more easily pay for big health care needs, like prescription drugs and operations. Early evidence suggests they are facing less financial stress as a result of their coverage. Some are now managing chronic and potentially life-threatening health conditions. But those benefits don\u2019t mean we should be surprised by the actuaries\u2019 recent findings on spending growth. More people in the health care system means more dollars spent on health care . The increase doesn\u2019t mean that Obamacare is leading to runaway costs, or that it\u2019s failing to reform the health care system to make it more efficient. But it does mean that we can\u2019t think of the coverage expansion as free.", "paragraph_answer": "That may be one way of thinking about the law\u2019s benefits for the newly insured, who had limited access to the health care system. For many, their new coverage means they can get free checkups and preventive disease screenings, and can more easily pay for big health care needs, like prescription drugs and operations. Early evidence suggests they are facing less financial stress as a result of their coverage. Some are now managing chronic and potentially life-threatening health conditions. But those benefits don\u2019t mean we should be surprised by the actuaries\u2019 recent findings on spending growth. More people in the health care system means more dollars spent on health care . The increase doesn\u2019t mean that Obamacare is leading to runaway costs, or that it\u2019s failing to reform the health care system to make it more efficient. But it does mean that we can\u2019t think of the coverage expansion as free.", "sentence_answer": "More people in the health care system means more dollars spent on health care ."} +{"question": "Besides operations, what can the covered people afford?", "paragraph": "That may be one way of thinking about the law\u2019s benefits for the newly insured, who had limited access to the health care system. For many, their new coverage means they can get free checkups and preventive disease screenings, and can more easily pay for big health care needs, like prescription drugs and operations. Early evidence suggests they are facing less financial stress as a result of their coverage. Some are now managing chronic and potentially life-threatening health conditions. But those benefits don\u2019t mean we should be surprised by the actuaries\u2019 recent findings on spending growth. More people in the health care system means more dollars spent on health care. The increase doesn\u2019t mean that Obamacare is leading to runaway costs, or that it\u2019s failing to reform the health care system to make it more efficient. But it does mean that we can\u2019t think of the coverage expansion as free.", "answer": "prescription drugs", "sentence": "For many, their new coverage means they can get free checkups and preventive disease screenings, and can more easily pay for big health care needs, like prescription drugs and operations.", "paragraph_sentence": "That may be one way of thinking about the law\u2019s benefits for the newly insured, who had limited access to the health care system. For many, their new coverage means they can get free checkups and preventive disease screenings, and can more easily pay for big health care needs, like prescription drugs and operations. Early evidence suggests they are facing less financial stress as a result of their coverage. Some are now managing chronic and potentially life-threatening health conditions. But those benefits don\u2019t mean we should be surprised by the actuaries\u2019 recent findings on spending growth. More people in the health care system means more dollars spent on health care. The increase doesn\u2019t mean that Obamacare is leading to runaway costs, or that it\u2019s failing to reform the health care system to make it more efficient. But it does mean that we can\u2019t think of the coverage expansion as free.", "paragraph_answer": "That may be one way of thinking about the law\u2019s benefits for the newly insured, who had limited access to the health care system. For many, their new coverage means they can get free checkups and preventive disease screenings, and can more easily pay for big health care needs, like prescription drugs and operations. Early evidence suggests they are facing less financial stress as a result of their coverage. Some are now managing chronic and potentially life-threatening health conditions. But those benefits don\u2019t mean we should be surprised by the actuaries\u2019 recent findings on spending growth. More people in the health care system means more dollars spent on health care. The increase doesn\u2019t mean that Obamacare is leading to runaway costs, or that it\u2019s failing to reform the health care system to make it more efficient. But it does mean that we can\u2019t think of the coverage expansion as free.", "sentence_answer": "For many, their new coverage means they can get free checkups and preventive disease screenings, and can more easily pay for big health care needs, like prescription drugs and operations."} +{"question": "What Rabbi is a well known Orthodox figure in Williamsburg, Brooklyn?", "paragraph": "Rabbi David Niederman, an influential Orthodox leader in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, sat outside a meeting of the New York City Board of Health on Wednesday, staring at a brochure and frowning. The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh, an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants. \u201cSome babies can get sick with herpes, which can lead to death,\u201d the form reads in bold type. \u201cThere is no way to avoid the risk.\u201d \u201cSerious misstatements,\u201d Rabbi Niederman said, looking pained, as he read the brochure for the first time. But the rabbi declined to elaborate, telling a reporter that, for now, he wanted only to praise the city for trying to work with Orthodox leaders on the matter.", "answer": "metzitzah b\u2019peh", "sentence": "The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh , an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rabbi David Niederman, an influential Orthodox leader in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, sat outside a meeting of the New York City Board of Health on Wednesday, staring at a brochure and frowning. The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh , an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants. \u201cSome babies can get sick with herpes, which can lead to death,\u201d the form reads in bold type. \u201cThere is no way to avoid the risk.\u201d \u201cSerious misstatements,\u201d Rabbi Niederman said, looking pained, as he read the brochure for the first time. But the rabbi declined to elaborate, telling a reporter that, for now, he wanted only to praise the city for trying to work with Orthodox leaders on the matter.", "paragraph_answer": "Rabbi David Niederman, an influential Orthodox leader in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, sat outside a meeting of the New York City Board of Health on Wednesday, staring at a brochure and frowning. The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh , an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants. \u201cSome babies can get sick with herpes, which can lead to death,\u201d the form reads in bold type. \u201cThere is no way to avoid the risk.\u201d \u201cSerious misstatements,\u201d Rabbi Niederman said, looking pained, as he read the brochure for the first time. But the rabbi declined to elaborate, telling a reporter that, for now, he wanted only to praise the city for trying to work with Orthodox leaders on the matter.", "sentence_answer": "The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh , an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants."} +{"question": "What term is used to describe a certain Orthodox circumcision ritual?", "paragraph": "Rabbi David Niederman, an influential Orthodox leader in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, sat outside a meeting of the New York City Board of Health on Wednesday, staring at a brochure and frowning. The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh, an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants. \u201cSome babies can get sick with herpes, which can lead to death,\u201d the form reads in bold type. \u201cThere is no way to avoid the risk.\u201d \u201cSerious misstatements,\u201d Rabbi Niederman said, looking pained, as he read the brochure for the first time. But the rabbi declined to elaborate, telling a reporter that, for now, he wanted only to praise the city for trying to work with Orthodox leaders on the matter.", "answer": "metzitzah b\u2019peh", "sentence": "The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh , an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rabbi David Niederman, an influential Orthodox leader in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, sat outside a meeting of the New York City Board of Health on Wednesday, staring at a brochure and frowning. The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh , an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants. \u201cSome babies can get sick with herpes, which can lead to death,\u201d the form reads in bold type. \u201cThere is no way to avoid the risk.\u201d \u201cSerious misstatements,\u201d Rabbi Niederman said, looking pained, as he read the brochure for the first time. But the rabbi declined to elaborate, telling a reporter that, for now, he wanted only to praise the city for trying to work with Orthodox leaders on the matter.", "paragraph_answer": "Rabbi David Niederman, an influential Orthodox leader in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, sat outside a meeting of the New York City Board of Health on Wednesday, staring at a brochure and frowning. The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh , an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants. \u201cSome babies can get sick with herpes, which can lead to death,\u201d the form reads in bold type. \u201cThere is no way to avoid the risk.\u201d \u201cSerious misstatements,\u201d Rabbi Niederman said, looking pained, as he read the brochure for the first time. But the rabbi declined to elaborate, telling a reporter that, for now, he wanted only to praise the city for trying to work with Orthodox leaders on the matter.", "sentence_answer": "The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh , an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants."} +{"question": "Whose administration created a pamphlet warning about metzitzah b\u2019peh?", "paragraph": "Rabbi David Niederman, an influential Orthodox leader in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, sat outside a meeting of the New York City Board of Health on Wednesday, staring at a brochure and frowning. The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh, an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants. \u201cSome babies can get sick with herpes, which can lead to death,\u201d the form reads in bold type. \u201cThere is no way to avoid the risk.\u201d \u201cSerious misstatements,\u201d Rabbi Niederman said, looking pained, as he read the brochure for the first time. But the rabbi declined to elaborate, telling a reporter that, for now, he wanted only to praise the city for trying to work with Orthodox leaders on the matter.", "answer": "de Blasio", "sentence": "The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh, an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rabbi David Niederman, an influential Orthodox leader in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, sat outside a meeting of the New York City Board of Health on Wednesday, staring at a brochure and frowning. The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh, an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants. \u201cSome babies can get sick with herpes, which can lead to death,\u201d the form reads in bold type. \u201cThere is no way to avoid the risk.\u201d \u201cSerious misstatements,\u201d Rabbi Niederman said, looking pained, as he read the brochure for the first time. But the rabbi declined to elaborate, telling a reporter that, for now, he wanted only to praise the city for trying to work with Orthodox leaders on the matter.", "paragraph_answer": "Rabbi David Niederman, an influential Orthodox leader in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, sat outside a meeting of the New York City Board of Health on Wednesday, staring at a brochure and frowning. The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh, an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants. \u201cSome babies can get sick with herpes, which can lead to death,\u201d the form reads in bold type. \u201cThere is no way to avoid the risk.\u201d \u201cSerious misstatements,\u201d Rabbi Niederman said, looking pained, as he read the brochure for the first time. But the rabbi declined to elaborate, telling a reporter that, for now, he wanted only to praise the city for trying to work with Orthodox leaders on the matter.", "sentence_answer": "The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh, an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants."} +{"question": "What disease has been linked with metzitzah b\u2019peh?", "paragraph": "Rabbi David Niederman, an influential Orthodox leader in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, sat outside a meeting of the New York City Board of Health on Wednesday, staring at a brochure and frowning. The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh, an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants. \u201cSome babies can get sick with herpes, which can lead to death,\u201d the form reads in bold type. \u201cThere is no way to avoid the risk.\u201d \u201cSerious misstatements,\u201d Rabbi Niederman said, looking pained, as he read the brochure for the first time. But the rabbi declined to elaborate, telling a reporter that, for now, he wanted only to praise the city for trying to work with Orthodox leaders on the matter.", "answer": "herpes infections", "sentence": "The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh, an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rabbi David Niederman, an influential Orthodox leader in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, sat outside a meeting of the New York City Board of Health on Wednesday, staring at a brochure and frowning. The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh, an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants. \u201cSome babies can get sick with herpes, which can lead to death,\u201d the form reads in bold type. \u201cThere is no way to avoid the risk.\u201d \u201cSerious misstatements,\u201d Rabbi Niederman said, looking pained, as he read the brochure for the first time. But the rabbi declined to elaborate, telling a reporter that, for now, he wanted only to praise the city for trying to work with Orthodox leaders on the matter.", "paragraph_answer": "Rabbi David Niederman, an influential Orthodox leader in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, sat outside a meeting of the New York City Board of Health on Wednesday, staring at a brochure and frowning. The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh, an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants. \u201cSome babies can get sick with herpes, which can lead to death,\u201d the form reads in bold type. \u201cThere is no way to avoid the risk.\u201d \u201cSerious misstatements,\u201d Rabbi Niederman said, looking pained, as he read the brochure for the first time. But the rabbi declined to elaborate, telling a reporter that, for now, he wanted only to praise the city for trying to work with Orthodox leaders on the matter.", "sentence_answer": "The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh, an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants."} +{"question": "What complication in babies can be caused by herpes?", "paragraph": "Rabbi David Niederman, an influential Orthodox leader in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, sat outside a meeting of the New York City Board of Health on Wednesday, staring at a brochure and frowning. The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh, an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants. \u201cSome babies can get sick with herpes, which can lead to death,\u201d the form reads in bold type. \u201cThere is no way to avoid the risk.\u201d \u201cSerious misstatements,\u201d Rabbi Niederman said, looking pained, as he read the brochure for the first time. But the rabbi declined to elaborate, telling a reporter that, for now, he wanted only to praise the city for trying to work with Orthodox leaders on the matter.", "answer": "death", "sentence": "\u201cSome babies can get sick with herpes, which can lead to death ,\u201d the form reads in bold type.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rabbi David Niederman, an influential Orthodox leader in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, sat outside a meeting of the New York City Board of Health on Wednesday, staring at a brochure and frowning. The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh, an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants. \u201cSome babies can get sick with herpes, which can lead to death ,\u201d the form reads in bold type. \u201cThere is no way to avoid the risk.\u201d \u201cSerious misstatements,\u201d Rabbi Niederman said, looking pained, as he read the brochure for the first time. But the rabbi declined to elaborate, telling a reporter that, for now, he wanted only to praise the city for trying to work with Orthodox leaders on the matter.", "paragraph_answer": "Rabbi David Niederman, an influential Orthodox leader in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, sat outside a meeting of the New York City Board of Health on Wednesday, staring at a brochure and frowning. The pamphlet, created by the de Blasio administration, is a glossy but blunt warning about the dangers of metzitzah b\u2019peh, an Orthodox circumcision ritual linked to herpes infections in infants. \u201cSome babies can get sick with herpes, which can lead to death ,\u201d the form reads in bold type. \u201cThere is no way to avoid the risk.\u201d \u201cSerious misstatements,\u201d Rabbi Niederman said, looking pained, as he read the brochure for the first time. But the rabbi declined to elaborate, telling a reporter that, for now, he wanted only to praise the city for trying to work with Orthodox leaders on the matter.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cSome babies can get sick with herpes, which can lead to death ,\u201d the form reads in bold type."} +{"question": "Who is the star point guard for the Oklahoma City Thunder?", "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": "Russell Westbrook", "sentence": "\u201cIs Russell Westbrook a cat or a dog?\u201d", "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": "\u201cIs Russell Westbrook a cat or a dog?\u201d"} +{"question": "Who thought Westbrook was more of a dog?", "paragraph": "\u201cIs Russell Westbrook a cat or a dog?\u201d Westbrook is, in fact, the star point guard for the Oklahoma City Thunder, so this was a somewhat jarring question to pose to his fellow players during the National Basketball Association\u2019s All-Star weekend in 2013. Nonetheless, they played along. James Harden thought Westbrook was more of a dog. Dwyane Wade hedged. \u201cHe\u2019s a cat-dog,\u201d he said. Finally, Westbrook weighed in. \u201cWolf,\u201d he said. The cat-or-dog question came from a host of \u201cThe Basketball Jones,\u201d an N.B.A. podcast started in 2006 by three Canadian basketball fanatics who will bring their blend of deep basketball analysis and irreverent, goofy attitude to the N.B.A.\u2019s All-Star festivities this weekend in New York.", "answer": "James Harden", "sentence": "James Harden thought Westbrook was more of a dog.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIs Russell Westbrook a cat or a dog?\u201d Westbrook is, in fact, the star point guard for the Oklahoma City Thunder, so this was a somewhat jarring question to pose to his fellow players during the National Basketball Association\u2019s All-Star weekend in 2013. Nonetheless, they played along. James Harden thought Westbrook was more of a dog. Dwyane Wade hedged. \u201cHe\u2019s a cat-dog,\u201d he said. Finally, Westbrook weighed in. \u201cWolf,\u201d he said. The cat-or-dog question came from a host of \u201cThe Basketball Jones,\u201d an N.B.A. podcast started in 2006 by three Canadian basketball fanatics who will bring their blend of deep basketball analysis and irreverent, goofy attitude to the N.B.A.\u2019s All-Star festivities this weekend in New York.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIs Russell Westbrook a cat or a dog?\u201d Westbrook is, in fact, the star point guard for the Oklahoma City Thunder, so this was a somewhat jarring question to pose to his fellow players during the National Basketball Association\u2019s All-Star weekend in 2013. Nonetheless, they played along. James Harden thought Westbrook was more of a dog. Dwyane Wade hedged. \u201cHe\u2019s a cat-dog,\u201d he said. Finally, Westbrook weighed in. \u201cWolf,\u201d he said. The cat-or-dog question came from a host of \u201cThe Basketball Jones,\u201d an N.B.A. podcast started in 2006 by three Canadian basketball fanatics who will bring their blend of deep basketball analysis and irreverent, goofy attitude to the N.B.A.\u2019s All-Star festivities this weekend in New York.", "sentence_answer": " James Harden thought Westbrook was more of a dog."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What did Westbrook think of himself in response to the 'cat or dog' question?", "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": "Wolf", "sentence": "\u201c Wolf ,\u201d he said.", "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. \u201c Wolf ,\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. \u201c Wolf ,\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": "\u201c Wolf ,\u201d he said."} +{"question": "What podcast did the 'cat or dog' question come from?", "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": "The Basketball Jones", "sentence": "The cat-or-dog question came from a host of \u201c The 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_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 \u201c The 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 \u201c The 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": "The cat-or-dog question came from a host of \u201c The 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."} +{"question": "Who will be broadcasting for the NBA this year?", "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 hosts of \u201cThe Jones\u201d", "sentence": "But this year, the hosts of \u201cThe Jones\u201d will be broadcasting for the league itself.", "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 \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.", "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 \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.", "sentence_answer": "But this year, the hosts of \u201cThe Jones\u201d will be broadcasting for the league itself."} +{"question": "What show in its second season is growing in popularity?", "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."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What are \"The Starters\" podcast downloads up to?", "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": "22 percent", "sentence": "According to the network, viewership has increased by 24 percent this season, with podcast downloads up 22 percent .", "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 \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.", "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 \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.", "sentence_answer": "According to the network, viewership has increased by 24 percent this season, with podcast downloads up 22 percent ."} +{"question": "Who is planned to make an appearance on \"The Starters\"?", "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": "George Gervin", "sentence": "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 .", "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 \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.", "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 \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.", "sentence_answer": "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 ."} +{"question": "Who are the hosts, referred to as \"Mr.\"?", "paragraph": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201cThe Drop,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate. In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas", "sentence": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas , with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting.", "paragraph_sentence": " Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas , with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201cThe Drop,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate. In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas , with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201cThe Drop,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate. In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas , with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting."} +{"question": "What does Mr. Elder think of Westbrook?", "paragraph": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201cThe Drop,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate. In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "answer": "He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "sentence": "\u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201cThe Drop,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate. In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201cThe Drop,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate. In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d ", "sentence_answer": "\u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d "} +{"question": "What was number one on the countdown from the segment \"Meme Team\"?", "paragraph": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201cThe Drop,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate. In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "answer": "Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate", "sentence": "Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate .", "paragraph_sentence": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201cThe Drop,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate . In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201cThe Drop,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate . In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate ."} +{"question": "What podcast is downloaded more frequently than \"The Starters\" podcast?", "paragraph": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201cThe Drop,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate. In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "answer": "The Drop", "sentence": "This season they introduced \u201c The Drop ,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network.", "paragraph_sentence": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201c The Drop ,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate. In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201c The Drop ,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate. In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "This season they introduced \u201c The Drop ,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network."} +{"question": "What are the names of the personalities mentioned by first and last name?", "paragraph": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis, have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201cThe Drop,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate. In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "answer": "Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis", "sentence": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis , have not abandoned podcasting.", "paragraph_sentence": " Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis , have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201cThe Drop,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate. In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis , have not abandoned podcasting. This season they introduced \u201cThe Drop,\u201d a weekly, podcast-only show that is downloaded 70 percent more frequently on average than the podcast of the daily \u201cThe Starters\u201d television show, according to the network. Last week\u2019s episode featured references to Katy Perry\u2019s Super Bowl halftime show and a discussion of some of the more handsome N.B.A. stars. \u201cThe Starters\u201d TV show has tried to incorporate the lighter elements of \u201cThe Basketball Jones\u201d podcast in a way that recreates the spontaneity of its hosts\u2019 old material. On their show last Thursday, in a segment called \u201cMeme Team,\u201d the hosts counted down some of the goofiest moments from the N.B.A. that week. Number one on the countdown was Westbrook\u2019s reaction to being stiffed on a high five by a teammate. In the video, he turned around sharply and glared at the offending player. \u201cThat screams cat to me,\u201d Mr. Elder said. \u201cCase closed, right? He\u2019s more like a cat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Though \u201cThe Starters\u2019 \u201c television audience is growing, Mr. Elder and Mr. Melas, with the show\u2019s other personalities, Trey Kerby and Leigh Ellis , have not abandoned podcasting."} +{"question": "What is sunlight used for?", "paragraph": "Moreover, biofuels are an inefficient way to convert sunlight to fuel, meaning an immense amount of land would be required to supply a significant fraction of global energy demand, Mr. Searchinger said. That land will also be needed to help meet a global appetite for food that is expected to rise 70 percent or so by 2050, he said. \u201cWe\u2019ve only got one planet, with only so much land,\u201d Mr. Searchinger said. \u201cIf you use land for one purpose, you can\u2019t use it for another.\u201d Mr. Searchinger added that he was concerned by recent policy statements from the Obama administration that he said might open the door to extensive burning of wood pellets in the United States in the name of fighting global warming, similar to what has happened in Europe.", "answer": "biofuels", "sentence": "Moreover, biofuels are an inefficient way to convert sunlight to fuel, meaning an immense amount of land would be required to supply a significant fraction of global energy demand, Mr. Searchinger said.", "paragraph_sentence": " Moreover, biofuels are an inefficient way to convert sunlight to fuel, meaning an immense amount of land would be required to supply a significant fraction of global energy demand, Mr. Searchinger said. That land will also be needed to help meet a global appetite for food that is expected to rise 70 percent or so by 2050, he said. \u201cWe\u2019ve only got one planet, with only so much land,\u201d Mr. Searchinger said. \u201cIf you use land for one purpose, you can\u2019t use it for another.\u201d Mr. Searchinger added that he was concerned by recent policy statements from the Obama administration that he said might open the door to extensive burning of wood pellets in the United States in the name of fighting global warming, similar to what has happened in Europe.", "paragraph_answer": "Moreover, biofuels are an inefficient way to convert sunlight to fuel, meaning an immense amount of land would be required to supply a significant fraction of global energy demand, Mr. Searchinger said. That land will also be needed to help meet a global appetite for food that is expected to rise 70 percent or so by 2050, he said. \u201cWe\u2019ve only got one planet, with only so much land,\u201d Mr. Searchinger said. \u201cIf you use land for one purpose, you can\u2019t use it for another.\u201d Mr. Searchinger added that he was concerned by recent policy statements from the Obama administration that he said might open the door to extensive burning of wood pellets in the United States in the name of fighting global warming, similar to what has happened in Europe.", "sentence_answer": "Moreover, biofuels are an inefficient way to convert sunlight to fuel, meaning an immense amount of land would be required to supply a significant fraction of global energy demand, Mr. Searchinger said."} +{"question": "What is something that crating biofuels uses a lot of?", "paragraph": "Moreover, biofuels are an inefficient way to convert sunlight to fuel, meaning an immense amount of land would be required to supply a significant fraction of global energy demand, Mr. Searchinger said. That land will also be needed to help meet a global appetite for food that is expected to rise 70 percent or so by 2050, he said. \u201cWe\u2019ve only got one planet, with only so much land,\u201d Mr. Searchinger said. \u201cIf you use land for one purpose, you can\u2019t use it for another.\u201d Mr. Searchinger added that he was concerned by recent policy statements from the Obama administration that he said might open the door to extensive burning of wood pellets in the United States in the name of fighting global warming, similar to what has happened in Europe.", "answer": "sunlight", "sentence": "Moreover, biofuels are an inefficient way to convert sunlight to fuel, meaning an immense amount of land would be required to supply a significant fraction of global energy demand, Mr. Searchinger said.", "paragraph_sentence": " Moreover, biofuels are an inefficient way to convert sunlight to fuel, meaning an immense amount of land would be required to supply a significant fraction of global energy demand, Mr. Searchinger said. That land will also be needed to help meet a global appetite for food that is expected to rise 70 percent or so by 2050, he said. \u201cWe\u2019ve only got one planet, with only so much land,\u201d Mr. Searchinger said. \u201cIf you use land for one purpose, you can\u2019t use it for another.\u201d Mr. Searchinger added that he was concerned by recent policy statements from the Obama administration that he said might open the door to extensive burning of wood pellets in the United States in the name of fighting global warming, similar to what has happened in Europe.", "paragraph_answer": "Moreover, biofuels are an inefficient way to convert sunlight to fuel, meaning an immense amount of land would be required to supply a significant fraction of global energy demand, Mr. Searchinger said. That land will also be needed to help meet a global appetite for food that is expected to rise 70 percent or so by 2050, he said. \u201cWe\u2019ve only got one planet, with only so much land,\u201d Mr. Searchinger said. \u201cIf you use land for one purpose, you can\u2019t use it for another.\u201d Mr. Searchinger added that he was concerned by recent policy statements from the Obama administration that he said might open the door to extensive burning of wood pellets in the United States in the name of fighting global warming, similar to what has happened in Europe.", "sentence_answer": "Moreover, biofuels are an inefficient way to convert sunlight to fuel, meaning an immense amount of land would be required to supply a significant fraction of global energy demand, Mr. Searchinger said."} +{"question": "By what year is the land expected to raise 70 percent of the global apetite for food?", "paragraph": "Moreover, biofuels are an inefficient way to convert sunlight to fuel, meaning an immense amount of land would be required to supply a significant fraction of global energy demand, Mr. Searchinger said. That land will also be needed to help meet a global appetite for food that is expected to rise 70 percent or so by 2050, he said. \u201cWe\u2019ve only got one planet, with only so much land,\u201d Mr. Searchinger said. \u201cIf you use land for one purpose, you can\u2019t use it for another.\u201d Mr. Searchinger added that he was concerned by recent policy statements from the Obama administration that he said might open the door to extensive burning of wood pellets in the United States in the name of fighting global warming, similar to what has happened in Europe.", "answer": "2050", "sentence": "That land will also be needed to help meet a global appetite for food that is expected to rise 70 percent or so by 2050 , he said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Moreover, biofuels are an inefficient way to convert sunlight to fuel, meaning an immense amount of land would be required to supply a significant fraction of global energy demand, Mr. Searchinger said. That land will also be needed to help meet a global appetite for food that is expected to rise 70 percent or so by 2050 , he said. \u201cWe\u2019ve only got one planet, with only so much land,\u201d Mr. Searchinger said. \u201cIf you use land for one purpose, you can\u2019t use it for another.\u201d Mr. Searchinger added that he was concerned by recent policy statements from the Obama administration that he said might open the door to extensive burning of wood pellets in the United States in the name of fighting global warming, similar to what has happened in Europe.", "paragraph_answer": "Moreover, biofuels are an inefficient way to convert sunlight to fuel, meaning an immense amount of land would be required to supply a significant fraction of global energy demand, Mr. Searchinger said. That land will also be needed to help meet a global appetite for food that is expected to rise 70 percent or so by 2050 , he said. \u201cWe\u2019ve only got one planet, with only so much land,\u201d Mr. Searchinger said. \u201cIf you use land for one purpose, you can\u2019t use it for another.\u201d Mr. Searchinger added that he was concerned by recent policy statements from the Obama administration that he said might open the door to extensive burning of wood pellets in the United States in the name of fighting global warming, similar to what has happened in Europe.", "sentence_answer": "That land will also be needed to help meet a global appetite for food that is expected to rise 70 percent or so by 2050 , he said."} +{"question": "What did Mr. Searchinger say we have one of?", "paragraph": "Moreover, biofuels are an inefficient way to convert sunlight to fuel, meaning an immense amount of land would be required to supply a significant fraction of global energy demand, Mr. Searchinger said. That land will also be needed to help meet a global appetite for food that is expected to rise 70 percent or so by 2050, he said. \u201cWe\u2019ve only got one planet, with only so much land,\u201d Mr. Searchinger said. \u201cIf you use land for one purpose, you can\u2019t use it for another.\u201d Mr. Searchinger added that he was concerned by recent policy statements from the Obama administration that he said might open the door to extensive burning of wood pellets in the United States in the name of fighting global warming, similar to what has happened in Europe.", "answer": "planet", "sentence": "\u201cWe\u2019ve only got one planet , with only so much land,\u201d Mr. Searchinger said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Moreover, biofuels are an inefficient way to convert sunlight to fuel, meaning an immense amount of land would be required to supply a significant fraction of global energy demand, Mr. Searchinger said. That land will also be needed to help meet a global appetite for food that is expected to rise 70 percent or so by 2050, he said. \u201cWe\u2019ve only got one planet , with only so much land,\u201d Mr. Searchinger said. \u201cIf you use land for one purpose, you can\u2019t use it for another.\u201d Mr. Searchinger added that he was concerned by recent policy statements from the Obama administration that he said might open the door to extensive burning of wood pellets in the United States in the name of fighting global warming, similar to what has happened in Europe.", "paragraph_answer": "Moreover, biofuels are an inefficient way to convert sunlight to fuel, meaning an immense amount of land would be required to supply a significant fraction of global energy demand, Mr. Searchinger said. That land will also be needed to help meet a global appetite for food that is expected to rise 70 percent or so by 2050, he said. \u201cWe\u2019ve only got one planet , with only so much land,\u201d Mr. Searchinger said. \u201cIf you use land for one purpose, you can\u2019t use it for another.\u201d Mr. Searchinger added that he was concerned by recent policy statements from the Obama administration that he said might open the door to extensive burning of wood pellets in the United States in the name of fighting global warming, similar to what has happened in Europe.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe\u2019ve only got one planet , with only so much land,\u201d Mr. Searchinger said."} +{"question": "What did Mr. Searchinge say the land cannot be used for it is already used for something.", "paragraph": "Moreover, biofuels are an inefficient way to convert sunlight to fuel, meaning an immense amount of land would be required to supply a significant fraction of global energy demand, Mr. Searchinger said. That land will also be needed to help meet a global appetite for food that is expected to rise 70 percent or so by 2050, he said. \u201cWe\u2019ve only got one planet, with only so much land,\u201d Mr. Searchinger said. \u201cIf you use land for one purpose, you can\u2019t use it for another.\u201d Mr. Searchinger added that he was concerned by recent policy statements from the Obama administration that he said might open the door to extensive burning of wood pellets in the United States in the name of fighting global warming, similar to what has happened in Europe.", "answer": "you can\u2019t use it for another", "sentence": "\u201cIf you use land for one purpose, you can\u2019t use it for another .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Moreover, biofuels are an inefficient way to convert sunlight to fuel, meaning an immense amount of land would be required to supply a significant fraction of global energy demand, Mr. Searchinger said. That land will also be needed to help meet a global appetite for food that is expected to rise 70 percent or so by 2050, he said. \u201cWe\u2019ve only got one planet, with only so much land,\u201d Mr. Searchinger said. \u201cIf you use land for one purpose, you can\u2019t use it for another .\u201d Mr. Searchinger added that he was concerned by recent policy statements from the Obama administration that he said might open the door to extensive burning of wood pellets in the United States in the name of fighting global warming, similar to what has happened in Europe.", "paragraph_answer": "Moreover, biofuels are an inefficient way to convert sunlight to fuel, meaning an immense amount of land would be required to supply a significant fraction of global energy demand, Mr. Searchinger said. That land will also be needed to help meet a global appetite for food that is expected to rise 70 percent or so by 2050, he said. \u201cWe\u2019ve only got one planet, with only so much land,\u201d Mr. Searchinger said. \u201cIf you use land for one purpose, you can\u2019t use it for another .\u201d Mr. Searchinger added that he was concerned by recent policy statements from the Obama administration that he said might open the door to extensive burning of wood pellets in the United States in the name of fighting global warming, similar to what has happened in Europe.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIf you use land for one purpose, you can\u2019t use it for another .\u201d"} +{"question": "What was Jason Hill not involed in?", "paragraph": "Jason Hill, who studies bioenergy at the University of Minnesota, was not involved in the World Resources Institute report, but reviewed it at the request of The Times. He endorsed some of its conclusions, particularly the idea that turning food crops into fuel makes little sense. \u201cIt\u2019s true that our first-generation biofuels have not lived up to their promise,\u201d Dr. Hill said. \u201cWe\u2019ve found they do not offer the environmental benefits they were purported to have, and they have a substantial negative impact on the food system.\u201d However, Dr. Hill was more bullish than Mr. Searchinger on the potential for newer types of biofuels made from crops planted specifically for that purpose. Their potential environmental and economic benefits are not yet clear, and governments would be acting prematurely if they were to abandon research on them, Dr. Hill said, though he also doubted that they could ever supply any large fraction of global fuel demand.", "answer": "the World Resources Institute report", "sentence": "Jason Hill, who studies bioenergy at the University of Minnesota, was not involved in the World Resources Institute report , but reviewed it at the request of The Times.", "paragraph_sentence": " Jason Hill, who studies bioenergy at the University of Minnesota, was not involved in the World Resources Institute report , but reviewed it at the request of The Times. He endorsed some of its conclusions, particularly the idea that turning food crops into fuel makes little sense. \u201cIt\u2019s true that our first-generation biofuels have not lived up to their promise,\u201d Dr. Hill said. \u201cWe\u2019ve found they do not offer the environmental benefits they were purported to have, and they have a substantial negative impact on the food system.\u201d However, Dr. Hill was more bullish than Mr. Searchinger on the potential for newer types of biofuels made from crops planted specifically for that purpose. Their potential environmental and economic benefits are not yet clear, and governments would be acting prematurely if they were to abandon research on them, Dr. Hill said, though he also doubted that they could ever supply any large fraction of global fuel demand.", "paragraph_answer": "Jason Hill, who studies bioenergy at the University of Minnesota, was not involved in the World Resources Institute report , but reviewed it at the request of The Times. He endorsed some of its conclusions, particularly the idea that turning food crops into fuel makes little sense. \u201cIt\u2019s true that our first-generation biofuels have not lived up to their promise,\u201d Dr. Hill said. \u201cWe\u2019ve found they do not offer the environmental benefits they were purported to have, and they have a substantial negative impact on the food system.\u201d However, Dr. Hill was more bullish than Mr. Searchinger on the potential for newer types of biofuels made from crops planted specifically for that purpose. Their potential environmental and economic benefits are not yet clear, and governments would be acting prematurely if they were to abandon research on them, Dr. Hill said, though he also doubted that they could ever supply any large fraction of global fuel demand.", "sentence_answer": "Jason Hill, who studies bioenergy at the University of Minnesota, was not involved in the World Resources Institute report , but reviewed it at the request of The Times."} +{"question": "What did the report say made little sense?", "paragraph": "Jason Hill, who studies bioenergy at the University of Minnesota, was not involved in the World Resources Institute report, but reviewed it at the request of The Times. He endorsed some of its conclusions, particularly the idea that turning food crops into fuel makes little sense. \u201cIt\u2019s true that our first-generation biofuels have not lived up to their promise,\u201d Dr. Hill said. \u201cWe\u2019ve found they do not offer the environmental benefits they were purported to have, and they have a substantial negative impact on the food system.\u201d However, Dr. Hill was more bullish than Mr. Searchinger on the potential for newer types of biofuels made from crops planted specifically for that purpose. Their potential environmental and economic benefits are not yet clear, and governments would be acting prematurely if they were to abandon research on them, Dr. Hill said, though he also doubted that they could ever supply any large fraction of global fuel demand.", "answer": "turning food crops into fuel", "sentence": "He endorsed some of its conclusions, particularly the idea that turning food crops into fuel makes little sense.", "paragraph_sentence": "Jason Hill, who studies bioenergy at the University of Minnesota, was not involved in the World Resources Institute report, but reviewed it at the request of The Times. He endorsed some of its conclusions, particularly the idea that turning food crops into fuel makes little sense. \u201cIt\u2019s true that our first-generation biofuels have not lived up to their promise,\u201d Dr. Hill said. \u201cWe\u2019ve found they do not offer the environmental benefits they were purported to have, and they have a substantial negative impact on the food system.\u201d However, Dr. Hill was more bullish than Mr. Searchinger on the potential for newer types of biofuels made from crops planted specifically for that purpose. Their potential environmental and economic benefits are not yet clear, and governments would be acting prematurely if they were to abandon research on them, Dr. Hill said, though he also doubted that they could ever supply any large fraction of global fuel demand.", "paragraph_answer": "Jason Hill, who studies bioenergy at the University of Minnesota, was not involved in the World Resources Institute report, but reviewed it at the request of The Times. He endorsed some of its conclusions, particularly the idea that turning food crops into fuel makes little sense. \u201cIt\u2019s true that our first-generation biofuels have not lived up to their promise,\u201d Dr. Hill said. \u201cWe\u2019ve found they do not offer the environmental benefits they were purported to have, and they have a substantial negative impact on the food system.\u201d However, Dr. Hill was more bullish than Mr. Searchinger on the potential for newer types of biofuels made from crops planted specifically for that purpose. Their potential environmental and economic benefits are not yet clear, and governments would be acting prematurely if they were to abandon research on them, Dr. Hill said, though he also doubted that they could ever supply any large fraction of global fuel demand.", "sentence_answer": "He endorsed some of its conclusions, particularly the idea that turning food crops into fuel makes little sense."} +{"question": "What did not live up to it's promise?", "paragraph": "Jason Hill, who studies bioenergy at the University of Minnesota, was not involved in the World Resources Institute report, but reviewed it at the request of The Times. He endorsed some of its conclusions, particularly the idea that turning food crops into fuel makes little sense. \u201cIt\u2019s true that our first-generation biofuels have not lived up to their promise,\u201d Dr. Hill said. \u201cWe\u2019ve found they do not offer the environmental benefits they were purported to have, and they have a substantial negative impact on the food system.\u201d However, Dr. Hill was more bullish than Mr. Searchinger on the potential for newer types of biofuels made from crops planted specifically for that purpose. Their potential environmental and economic benefits are not yet clear, and governments would be acting prematurely if they were to abandon research on them, Dr. Hill said, though he also doubted that they could ever supply any large fraction of global fuel demand.", "answer": "first-generation biofuels", "sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s true that our first-generation biofuels have not lived up to their promise,\u201d Dr. Hill said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Jason Hill, who studies bioenergy at the University of Minnesota, was not involved in the World Resources Institute report, but reviewed it at the request of The Times. He endorsed some of its conclusions, particularly the idea that turning food crops into fuel makes little sense. \u201cIt\u2019s true that our first-generation biofuels have not lived up to their promise,\u201d Dr. Hill said. \u201cWe\u2019ve found they do not offer the environmental benefits they were purported to have, and they have a substantial negative impact on the food system.\u201d However, Dr. Hill was more bullish than Mr. Searchinger on the potential for newer types of biofuels made from crops planted specifically for that purpose. Their potential environmental and economic benefits are not yet clear, and governments would be acting prematurely if they were to abandon research on them, Dr. Hill said, though he also doubted that they could ever supply any large fraction of global fuel demand.", "paragraph_answer": "Jason Hill, who studies bioenergy at the University of Minnesota, was not involved in the World Resources Institute report, but reviewed it at the request of The Times. He endorsed some of its conclusions, particularly the idea that turning food crops into fuel makes little sense. \u201cIt\u2019s true that our first-generation biofuels have not lived up to their promise,\u201d Dr. Hill said. \u201cWe\u2019ve found they do not offer the environmental benefits they were purported to have, and they have a substantial negative impact on the food system.\u201d However, Dr. Hill was more bullish than Mr. Searchinger on the potential for newer types of biofuels made from crops planted specifically for that purpose. Their potential environmental and economic benefits are not yet clear, and governments would be acting prematurely if they were to abandon research on them, Dr. Hill said, though he also doubted that they could ever supply any large fraction of global fuel demand.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s true that our first-generation biofuels have not lived up to their promise,\u201d Dr. Hill said."} +{"question": "What did Dr. Hill say the government would be doing if it gave up on biofuels ?", "paragraph": "Jason Hill, who studies bioenergy at the University of Minnesota, was not involved in the World Resources Institute report, but reviewed it at the request of The Times. He endorsed some of its conclusions, particularly the idea that turning food crops into fuel makes little sense. \u201cIt\u2019s true that our first-generation biofuels have not lived up to their promise,\u201d Dr. Hill said. \u201cWe\u2019ve found they do not offer the environmental benefits they were purported to have, and they have a substantial negative impact on the food system.\u201d However, Dr. Hill was more bullish than Mr. Searchinger on the potential for newer types of biofuels made from crops planted specifically for that purpose. Their potential environmental and economic benefits are not yet clear, and governments would be acting prematurely if they were to abandon research on them, Dr. Hill said, though he also doubted that they could ever supply any large fraction of global fuel demand.", "answer": "acting prematurely", "sentence": "Their potential environmental and economic benefits are not yet clear, and governments would be acting prematurely if they were to abandon research on them, Dr. Hill said, though he also doubted that they could ever supply any large fraction of global fuel demand.", "paragraph_sentence": "Jason Hill, who studies bioenergy at the University of Minnesota, was not involved in the World Resources Institute report, but reviewed it at the request of The Times. He endorsed some of its conclusions, particularly the idea that turning food crops into fuel makes little sense. \u201cIt\u2019s true that our first-generation biofuels have not lived up to their promise,\u201d Dr. Hill said. \u201cWe\u2019ve found they do not offer the environmental benefits they were purported to have, and they have a substantial negative impact on the food system.\u201d However, Dr. Hill was more bullish than Mr. Searchinger on the potential for newer types of biofuels made from crops planted specifically for that purpose. Their potential environmental and economic benefits are not yet clear, and governments would be acting prematurely if they were to abandon research on them, Dr. Hill said, though he also doubted that they could ever supply any large fraction of global fuel demand. ", "paragraph_answer": "Jason Hill, who studies bioenergy at the University of Minnesota, was not involved in the World Resources Institute report, but reviewed it at the request of The Times. He endorsed some of its conclusions, particularly the idea that turning food crops into fuel makes little sense. \u201cIt\u2019s true that our first-generation biofuels have not lived up to their promise,\u201d Dr. Hill said. \u201cWe\u2019ve found they do not offer the environmental benefits they were purported to have, and they have a substantial negative impact on the food system.\u201d However, Dr. Hill was more bullish than Mr. Searchinger on the potential for newer types of biofuels made from crops planted specifically for that purpose. Their potential environmental and economic benefits are not yet clear, and governments would be acting prematurely if they were to abandon research on them, Dr. Hill said, though he also doubted that they could ever supply any large fraction of global fuel demand.", "sentence_answer": "Their potential environmental and economic benefits are not yet clear, and governments would be acting prematurely if they were to abandon research on them, Dr. Hill said, though he also doubted that they could ever supply any large fraction of global fuel demand."} +{"question": "What did first-generation biofuels have a negative impact on?", "paragraph": "Jason Hill, who studies bioenergy at the University of Minnesota, was not involved in the World Resources Institute report, but reviewed it at the request of The Times. He endorsed some of its conclusions, particularly the idea that turning food crops into fuel makes little sense. \u201cIt\u2019s true that our first-generation biofuels have not lived up to their promise,\u201d Dr. Hill said. \u201cWe\u2019ve found they do not offer the environmental benefits they were purported to have, and they have a substantial negative impact on the food system.\u201d However, Dr. Hill was more bullish than Mr. Searchinger on the potential for newer types of biofuels made from crops planted specifically for that purpose. Their potential environmental and economic benefits are not yet clear, and governments would be acting prematurely if they were to abandon research on them, Dr. Hill said, though he also doubted that they could ever supply any large fraction of global fuel demand.", "answer": "the food system", "sentence": "\u201cWe\u2019ve found they do not offer the environmental benefits they were purported to have, and they have a substantial negative impact on the food system .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Jason Hill, who studies bioenergy at the University of Minnesota, was not involved in the World Resources Institute report, but reviewed it at the request of The Times. He endorsed some of its conclusions, particularly the idea that turning food crops into fuel makes little sense. \u201cIt\u2019s true that our first-generation biofuels have not lived up to their promise,\u201d Dr. Hill said. \u201cWe\u2019ve found they do not offer the environmental benefits they were purported to have, and they have a substantial negative impact on the food system .\u201d However, Dr. Hill was more bullish than Mr. Searchinger on the potential for newer types of biofuels made from crops planted specifically for that purpose. Their potential environmental and economic benefits are not yet clear, and governments would be acting prematurely if they were to abandon research on them, Dr. Hill said, though he also doubted that they could ever supply any large fraction of global fuel demand.", "paragraph_answer": "Jason Hill, who studies bioenergy at the University of Minnesota, was not involved in the World Resources Institute report, but reviewed it at the request of The Times. He endorsed some of its conclusions, particularly the idea that turning food crops into fuel makes little sense. \u201cIt\u2019s true that our first-generation biofuels have not lived up to their promise,\u201d Dr. Hill said. \u201cWe\u2019ve found they do not offer the environmental benefits they were purported to have, and they have a substantial negative impact on the food system .\u201d However, Dr. Hill was more bullish than Mr. Searchinger on the potential for newer types of biofuels made from crops planted specifically for that purpose. Their potential environmental and economic benefits are not yet clear, and governments would be acting prematurely if they were to abandon research on them, Dr. Hill said, though he also doubted that they could ever supply any large fraction of global fuel demand.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe\u2019ve found they do not offer the environmental benefits they were purported to have, and they have a substantial negative impact on the food system .\u201d"} +{"question": "What kind of news outlet is the Waterford Whispers?", "paragraph": "An Irish satirical news source, Waterford Whispers, responded by posting its own \u201cfeminist newspaper photoshop,\u201d featuring the same Paris street scene with three female leaders depicted, but no men. Newspapers catering to ultra-Orthodox Jews have been embarrassed before by their handling of news photographs depicting women. In 2011, Di Tzeitung, a Brooklyn-based publication, apologized for digitally altering a photograph to remove Hillary Rodham Clinton, who was then secretary of state, and another woman from a scene in the White House Situation Room.", "answer": "satirical", "sentence": "An Irish satirical news source, Waterford Whispers, responded by posting its own \u201cfeminist newspaper photoshop,\u201d featuring the same Paris street scene with three female leaders depicted, but no men.", "paragraph_sentence": " An Irish satirical news source, Waterford Whispers, responded by posting its own \u201cfeminist newspaper photoshop,\u201d featuring the same Paris street scene with three female leaders depicted, but no men. Newspapers catering to ultra-Orthodox Jews have been embarrassed before by their handling of news photographs depicting women. In 2011, Di Tzeitung, a Brooklyn-based publication, apologized for digitally altering a photograph to remove Hillary Rodham Clinton, who was then secretary of state, and another woman from a scene in the White House Situation Room.", "paragraph_answer": "An Irish satirical news source, Waterford Whispers, responded by posting its own \u201cfeminist newspaper photoshop,\u201d featuring the same Paris street scene with three female leaders depicted, but no men. Newspapers catering to ultra-Orthodox Jews have been embarrassed before by their handling of news photographs depicting women. In 2011, Di Tzeitung, a Brooklyn-based publication, apologized for digitally altering a photograph to remove Hillary Rodham Clinton, who was then secretary of state, and another woman from a scene in the White House Situation Room.", "sentence_answer": "An Irish satirical news source, Waterford Whispers, responded by posting its own \u201cfeminist newspaper photoshop,\u201d featuring the same Paris street scene with three female leaders depicted, but no men."} +{"question": "Di Tzeitung is based in what city?", "paragraph": "An Irish satirical news source, Waterford Whispers, responded by posting its own \u201cfeminist newspaper photoshop,\u201d featuring the same Paris street scene with three female leaders depicted, but no men. Newspapers catering to ultra-Orthodox Jews have been embarrassed before by their handling of news photographs depicting women. In 2011, Di Tzeitung, a Brooklyn-based publication, apologized for digitally altering a photograph to remove Hillary Rodham Clinton, who was then secretary of state, and another woman from a scene in the White House Situation Room.", "answer": "Brooklyn", "sentence": "In 2011, Di Tzeitung, a Brooklyn -based publication, apologized for digitally altering a photograph to remove Hillary Rodham Clinton, who was then secretary of state, and another woman from a scene in the White House Situation Room.", "paragraph_sentence": "An Irish satirical news source, Waterford Whispers, responded by posting its own \u201cfeminist newspaper photoshop,\u201d featuring the same Paris street scene with three female leaders depicted, but no men. Newspapers catering to ultra-Orthodox Jews have been embarrassed before by their handling of news photographs depicting women. In 2011, Di Tzeitung, a Brooklyn -based publication, apologized for digitally altering a photograph to remove Hillary Rodham Clinton, who was then secretary of state, and another woman from a scene in the White House Situation Room. ", "paragraph_answer": "An Irish satirical news source, Waterford Whispers, responded by posting its own \u201cfeminist newspaper photoshop,\u201d featuring the same Paris street scene with three female leaders depicted, but no men. Newspapers catering to ultra-Orthodox Jews have been embarrassed before by their handling of news photographs depicting women. In 2011, Di Tzeitung, a Brooklyn -based publication, apologized for digitally altering a photograph to remove Hillary Rodham Clinton, who was then secretary of state, and another woman from a scene in the White House Situation Room.", "sentence_answer": "In 2011, Di Tzeitung, a Brooklyn -based publication, apologized for digitally altering a photograph to remove Hillary Rodham Clinton, who was then secretary of state, and another woman from a scene in the White House Situation Room."} +{"question": "Di Tzeitung had to apologize after digitally removing what politician from a photo?", "paragraph": "An Irish satirical news source, Waterford Whispers, responded by posting its own \u201cfeminist newspaper photoshop,\u201d featuring the same Paris street scene with three female leaders depicted, but no men. Newspapers catering to ultra-Orthodox Jews have been embarrassed before by their handling of news photographs depicting women. In 2011, Di Tzeitung, a Brooklyn-based publication, apologized for digitally altering a photograph to remove Hillary Rodham Clinton, who was then secretary of state, and another woman from a scene in the White House Situation Room.", "answer": "Hillary Rodham Clinton", "sentence": "In 2011, Di Tzeitung, a Brooklyn-based publication, apologized for digitally altering a photograph to remove Hillary Rodham Clinton , who was then secretary of state, and another woman from a scene in the White House Situation Room.", "paragraph_sentence": "An Irish satirical news source, Waterford Whispers, responded by posting its own \u201cfeminist newspaper photoshop,\u201d featuring the same Paris street scene with three female leaders depicted, but no men. Newspapers catering to ultra-Orthodox Jews have been embarrassed before by their handling of news photographs depicting women. In 2011, Di Tzeitung, a Brooklyn-based publication, apologized for digitally altering a photograph to remove Hillary Rodham Clinton , who was then secretary of state, and another woman from a scene in the White House Situation Room. ", "paragraph_answer": "An Irish satirical news source, Waterford Whispers, responded by posting its own \u201cfeminist newspaper photoshop,\u201d featuring the same Paris street scene with three female leaders depicted, but no men. Newspapers catering to ultra-Orthodox Jews have been embarrassed before by their handling of news photographs depicting women. In 2011, Di Tzeitung, a Brooklyn-based publication, apologized for digitally altering a photograph to remove Hillary Rodham Clinton , who was then secretary of state, and another woman from a scene in the White House Situation Room.", "sentence_answer": "In 2011, Di Tzeitung, a Brooklyn-based publication, apologized for digitally altering a photograph to remove Hillary Rodham Clinton , who was then secretary of state, and another woman from a scene in the White House Situation Room."} +{"question": "Newspapers with what large readership have gotten into trouble for how they handle photos of women?", "paragraph": "An Irish satirical news source, Waterford Whispers, responded by posting its own \u201cfeminist newspaper photoshop,\u201d featuring the same Paris street scene with three female leaders depicted, but no men. Newspapers catering to ultra-Orthodox Jews have been embarrassed before by their handling of news photographs depicting women. In 2011, Di Tzeitung, a Brooklyn-based publication, apologized for digitally altering a photograph to remove Hillary Rodham Clinton, who was then secretary of state, and another woman from a scene in the White House Situation Room.", "answer": "Orthodox Jews", "sentence": "Newspapers catering to ultra- Orthodox Jews have been embarrassed before by their handling of news photographs depicting women.", "paragraph_sentence": "An Irish satirical news source, Waterford Whispers, responded by posting its own \u201cfeminist newspaper photoshop,\u201d featuring the same Paris street scene with three female leaders depicted, but no men. Newspapers catering to ultra- Orthodox Jews have been embarrassed before by their handling of news photographs depicting women. In 2011, Di Tzeitung, a Brooklyn-based publication, apologized for digitally altering a photograph to remove Hillary Rodham Clinton, who was then secretary of state, and another woman from a scene in the White House Situation Room.", "paragraph_answer": "An Irish satirical news source, Waterford Whispers, responded by posting its own \u201cfeminist newspaper photoshop,\u201d featuring the same Paris street scene with three female leaders depicted, but no men. Newspapers catering to ultra- Orthodox Jews have been embarrassed before by their handling of news photographs depicting women. In 2011, Di Tzeitung, a Brooklyn-based publication, apologized for digitally altering a photograph to remove Hillary Rodham Clinton, who was then secretary of state, and another woman from a scene in the White House Situation Room.", "sentence_answer": "Newspapers catering to ultra- Orthodox Jews have been embarrassed before by their handling of news photographs depicting women."} +{"question": "What did Mr. Mondella installed after suffering a break-in?", "paragraph": "In hindsight, the security cameras, wire and lights Mr. Mondella installed after a break-in about eight years ago seemed strange, Mr. Murano said, especially after investigators told neighbors that a large sum of money had been taken. \u201cI didn\u2019t think he was protecting the Dye No. 7 or his equipment,\u201d he said. Yet the factory seemed nothing if not successful. Mr. Mondella had expanded the plant multiple times, neighbors said, and he had bought warehouses and satellite facilities on other streets nearby. Hurricane Sandy devastated much of the rest of the waterfront neighborhood, but left the Dell\u2019s factory intact.", "answer": "security cameras", "sentence": "In hindsight, the security cameras , wire and lights Mr. Mondella installed after a break-in about eight years ago seemed strange, Mr. Murano said, especially after investigators told neighbors that a large sum of money had been taken.", "paragraph_sentence": " In hindsight, the security cameras , wire and lights Mr. Mondella installed after a break-in about eight years ago seemed strange, Mr. Murano said, especially after investigators told neighbors that a large sum of money had been taken. \u201cI didn\u2019t think he was protecting the Dye No. 7 or his equipment,\u201d he said. Yet the factory seemed nothing if not successful. Mr. Mondella had expanded the plant multiple times, neighbors said, and he had bought warehouses and satellite facilities on other streets nearby. Hurricane Sandy devastated much of the rest of the waterfront neighborhood, but left the Dell\u2019s factory intact.", "paragraph_answer": "In hindsight, the security cameras , wire and lights Mr. Mondella installed after a break-in about eight years ago seemed strange, Mr. Murano said, especially after investigators told neighbors that a large sum of money had been taken. \u201cI didn\u2019t think he was protecting the Dye No. 7 or his equipment,\u201d he said. Yet the factory seemed nothing if not successful. Mr. Mondella had expanded the plant multiple times, neighbors said, and he had bought warehouses and satellite facilities on other streets nearby. Hurricane Sandy devastated much of the rest of the waterfront neighborhood, but left the Dell\u2019s factory intact.", "sentence_answer": "In hindsight, the security cameras , wire and lights Mr. Mondella installed after a break-in about eight years ago seemed strange, Mr. Murano said, especially after investigators told neighbors that a large sum of money had been taken."} +{"question": "What had been taken away from the factory?", "paragraph": "In hindsight, the security cameras, wire and lights Mr. Mondella installed after a break-in about eight years ago seemed strange, Mr. Murano said, especially after investigators told neighbors that a large sum of money had been taken. \u201cI didn\u2019t think he was protecting the Dye No. 7 or his equipment,\u201d he said. Yet the factory seemed nothing if not successful. Mr. Mondella had expanded the plant multiple times, neighbors said, and he had bought warehouses and satellite facilities on other streets nearby. Hurricane Sandy devastated much of the rest of the waterfront neighborhood, but left the Dell\u2019s factory intact.", "answer": "a large sum of money", "sentence": "that a large sum of money had been taken.", "paragraph_sentence": "In hindsight, the security cameras, wire and lights Mr. Mondella installed after a break-in about eight years ago seemed strange, Mr. Murano said, especially after investigators told neighbors that a large sum of money had been taken. \u201cI didn\u2019t think he was protecting the Dye No. 7 or his equipment,\u201d he said. Yet the factory seemed nothing if not successful. Mr. Mondella had expanded the plant multiple times, neighbors said, and he had bought warehouses and satellite facilities on other streets nearby. Hurricane Sandy devastated much of the rest of the waterfront neighborhood, but left the Dell\u2019s factory intact.", "paragraph_answer": "In hindsight, the security cameras, wire and lights Mr. Mondella installed after a break-in about eight years ago seemed strange, Mr. Murano said, especially after investigators told neighbors that a large sum of money had been taken. \u201cI didn\u2019t think he was protecting the Dye No. 7 or his equipment,\u201d he said. Yet the factory seemed nothing if not successful. Mr. Mondella had expanded the plant multiple times, neighbors said, and he had bought warehouses and satellite facilities on other streets nearby. Hurricane Sandy devastated much of the rest of the waterfront neighborhood, but left the Dell\u2019s factory intact.", "sentence_answer": "that a large sum of money had been taken."} +{"question": "When did happen the break-in?", "paragraph": "In hindsight, the security cameras, wire and lights Mr. Mondella installed after a break-in about eight years ago seemed strange, Mr. Murano said, especially after investigators told neighbors that a large sum of money had been taken. \u201cI didn\u2019t think he was protecting the Dye No. 7 or his equipment,\u201d he said. Yet the factory seemed nothing if not successful. Mr. Mondella had expanded the plant multiple times, neighbors said, and he had bought warehouses and satellite facilities on other streets nearby. Hurricane Sandy devastated much of the rest of the waterfront neighborhood, but left the Dell\u2019s factory intact.", "answer": "about eight years ago", "sentence": "In hindsight, the security cameras, wire and lights Mr. Mondella installed after a break-in about eight years ago seemed strange, Mr. Murano said, especially after investigators told neighbors that a large sum of money had been taken.", "paragraph_sentence": " In hindsight, the security cameras, wire and lights Mr. Mondella installed after a break-in about eight years ago seemed strange, Mr. Murano said, especially after investigators told neighbors that a large sum of money had been taken. \u201cI didn\u2019t think he was protecting the Dye No. 7 or his equipment,\u201d he said. Yet the factory seemed nothing if not successful. Mr. Mondella had expanded the plant multiple times, neighbors said, and he had bought warehouses and satellite facilities on other streets nearby. Hurricane Sandy devastated much of the rest of the waterfront neighborhood, but left the Dell\u2019s factory intact.", "paragraph_answer": "In hindsight, the security cameras, wire and lights Mr. Mondella installed after a break-in about eight years ago seemed strange, Mr. Murano said, especially after investigators told neighbors that a large sum of money had been taken. \u201cI didn\u2019t think he was protecting the Dye No. 7 or his equipment,\u201d he said. Yet the factory seemed nothing if not successful. Mr. Mondella had expanded the plant multiple times, neighbors said, and he had bought warehouses and satellite facilities on other streets nearby. Hurricane Sandy devastated much of the rest of the waterfront neighborhood, but left the Dell\u2019s factory intact.", "sentence_answer": "In hindsight, the security cameras, wire and lights Mr. Mondella installed after a break-in about eight years ago seemed strange, Mr. Murano said, especially after investigators told neighbors that a large sum of money had been taken."} +{"question": "What did Mr Mondella buy from other streets nearby?", "paragraph": "In hindsight, the security cameras, wire and lights Mr. Mondella installed after a break-in about eight years ago seemed strange, Mr. Murano said, especially after investigators told neighbors that a large sum of money had been taken. \u201cI didn\u2019t think he was protecting the Dye No. 7 or his equipment,\u201d he said. Yet the factory seemed nothing if not successful. Mr. Mondella had expanded the plant multiple times, neighbors said, and he had bought warehouses and satellite facilities on other streets nearby. Hurricane Sandy devastated much of the rest of the waterfront neighborhood, but left the Dell\u2019s factory intact.", "answer": "warehouses and satellite facilities", "sentence": "Mr. Mondella had expanded the plant multiple times, neighbors said, and he had bought warehouses and satellite facilities on other streets nearby.", "paragraph_sentence": "In hindsight, the security cameras, wire and lights Mr. Mondella installed after a break-in about eight years ago seemed strange, Mr. Murano said, especially after investigators told neighbors that a large sum of money had been taken. \u201cI didn\u2019t think he was protecting the Dye No. 7 or his equipment,\u201d he said. Yet the factory seemed nothing if not successful. Mr. Mondella had expanded the plant multiple times, neighbors said, and he had bought warehouses and satellite facilities on other streets nearby. Hurricane Sandy devastated much of the rest of the waterfront neighborhood, but left the Dell\u2019s factory intact.", "paragraph_answer": "In hindsight, the security cameras, wire and lights Mr. Mondella installed after a break-in about eight years ago seemed strange, Mr. Murano said, especially after investigators told neighbors that a large sum of money had been taken. \u201cI didn\u2019t think he was protecting the Dye No. 7 or his equipment,\u201d he said. Yet the factory seemed nothing if not successful. Mr. Mondella had expanded the plant multiple times, neighbors said, and he had bought warehouses and satellite facilities on other streets nearby. Hurricane Sandy devastated much of the rest of the waterfront neighborhood, but left the Dell\u2019s factory intact.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Mondella had expanded the plant multiple times, neighbors said, and he had bought warehouses and satellite facilities on other streets nearby."} +{"question": "What devastated much of the neighborhood?", "paragraph": "In hindsight, the security cameras, wire and lights Mr. Mondella installed after a break-in about eight years ago seemed strange, Mr. Murano said, especially after investigators told neighbors that a large sum of money had been taken. \u201cI didn\u2019t think he was protecting the Dye No. 7 or his equipment,\u201d he said. Yet the factory seemed nothing if not successful. Mr. Mondella had expanded the plant multiple times, neighbors said, and he had bought warehouses and satellite facilities on other streets nearby. Hurricane Sandy devastated much of the rest of the waterfront neighborhood, but left the Dell\u2019s factory intact.", "answer": "Hurricane Sandy", "sentence": "Hurricane Sandy devastated much of the rest of the waterfront neighborhood, but left the Dell\u2019s factory intact.", "paragraph_sentence": "In hindsight, the security cameras, wire and lights Mr. Mondella installed after a break-in about eight years ago seemed strange, Mr. Murano said, especially after investigators told neighbors that a large sum of money had been taken. \u201cI didn\u2019t think he was protecting the Dye No. 7 or his equipment,\u201d he said. Yet the factory seemed nothing if not successful. Mr. Mondella had expanded the plant multiple times, neighbors said, and he had bought warehouses and satellite facilities on other streets nearby. Hurricane Sandy devastated much of the rest of the waterfront neighborhood, but left the Dell\u2019s factory intact. ", "paragraph_answer": "In hindsight, the security cameras, wire and lights Mr. Mondella installed after a break-in about eight years ago seemed strange, Mr. Murano said, especially after investigators told neighbors that a large sum of money had been taken. \u201cI didn\u2019t think he was protecting the Dye No. 7 or his equipment,\u201d he said. Yet the factory seemed nothing if not successful. Mr. Mondella had expanded the plant multiple times, neighbors said, and he had bought warehouses and satellite facilities on other streets nearby. Hurricane Sandy devastated much of the rest of the waterfront neighborhood, but left the Dell\u2019s factory intact.", "sentence_answer": " Hurricane Sandy devastated much of the rest of the waterfront neighborhood, but left the Dell\u2019s factory intact."} +{"question": "What company failed to take appropriate action when presented with information that their vehicles were defective?", "paragraph": "Re \u201cFalling Through the Legal Cracks\u201d (Business Day, Dec. 30): The failure of General Motors to take appropriate actions when it learned that a defective ignition switch in vehicles it sold caused the injuries and deaths of innocent people speaks volumes about corporate morality and accountability. That is why plaintiffs must be able to sue without caps. The history of corporations\u2019 failure to protect the public is replete with such stories, from flammable pajamas to the lack of safety guards on dangerous machinery. Without the threat of recovery from lawsuits brought by plaintiffs and the potential for punitive damages, corporations have shown that they will not do what is morally required, but merely weigh the costs against the risks and take steps to discourage those who have suffered personal injuries and/or deaths of loved ones from suing.", "answer": "General Motors", "sentence": "Re \u201cFalling Through the Legal Cracks\u201d (Business Day, Dec. 30): The failure of General Motors to take appropriate actions when it learned that a defective ignition switch in vehicles it sold caused the injuries and deaths of innocent people speaks volumes about corporate morality and accountability.", "paragraph_sentence": " Re \u201cFalling Through the Legal Cracks\u201d (Business Day, Dec. 30): The failure of General Motors to take appropriate actions when it learned that a defective ignition switch in vehicles it sold caused the injuries and deaths of innocent people speaks volumes about corporate morality and accountability. That is why plaintiffs must be able to sue without caps. The history of corporations\u2019 failure to protect the public is replete with such stories, from flammable pajamas to the lack of safety guards on dangerous machinery. Without the threat of recovery from lawsuits brought by plaintiffs and the potential for punitive damages, corporations have shown that they will not do what is morally required, but merely weigh the costs against the risks and take steps to discourage those who have suffered personal injuries and/or deaths of loved ones from suing.", "paragraph_answer": "Re \u201cFalling Through the Legal Cracks\u201d (Business Day, Dec. 30): The failure of General Motors to take appropriate actions when it learned that a defective ignition switch in vehicles it sold caused the injuries and deaths of innocent people speaks volumes about corporate morality and accountability. That is why plaintiffs must be able to sue without caps. The history of corporations\u2019 failure to protect the public is replete with such stories, from flammable pajamas to the lack of safety guards on dangerous machinery. Without the threat of recovery from lawsuits brought by plaintiffs and the potential for punitive damages, corporations have shown that they will not do what is morally required, but merely weigh the costs against the risks and take steps to discourage those who have suffered personal injuries and/or deaths of loved ones from suing.", "sentence_answer": "Re \u201cFalling Through the Legal Cracks\u201d (Business Day, Dec. 30): The failure of General Motors to take appropriate actions when it learned that a defective ignition switch in vehicles it sold caused the injuries and deaths of innocent people speaks volumes about corporate morality and accountability."} +{"question": "What do corporations have a history of?", "paragraph": "Re \u201cFalling Through the Legal Cracks\u201d (Business Day, Dec. 30): The failure of General Motors to take appropriate actions when it learned that a defective ignition switch in vehicles it sold caused the injuries and deaths of innocent people speaks volumes about corporate morality and accountability. That is why plaintiffs must be able to sue without caps. The history of corporations\u2019 failure to protect the public is replete with such stories, from flammable pajamas to the lack of safety guards on dangerous machinery. Without the threat of recovery from lawsuits brought by plaintiffs and the potential for punitive damages, corporations have shown that they will not do what is morally required, but merely weigh the costs against the risks and take steps to discourage those who have suffered personal injuries and/or deaths of loved ones from suing.", "answer": "protect the public", "sentence": "The history of corporations\u2019 failure to protect the public is replete with such stories, from flammable pajamas to the lack of safety guards on dangerous machinery.", "paragraph_sentence": "Re \u201cFalling Through the Legal Cracks\u201d (Business Day, Dec. 30): The failure of General Motors to take appropriate actions when it learned that a defective ignition switch in vehicles it sold caused the injuries and deaths of innocent people speaks volumes about corporate morality and accountability. That is why plaintiffs must be able to sue without caps. The history of corporations\u2019 failure to protect the public is replete with such stories, from flammable pajamas to the lack of safety guards on dangerous machinery. Without the threat of recovery from lawsuits brought by plaintiffs and the potential for punitive damages, corporations have shown that they will not do what is morally required, but merely weigh the costs against the risks and take steps to discourage those who have suffered personal injuries and/or deaths of loved ones from suing.", "paragraph_answer": "Re \u201cFalling Through the Legal Cracks\u201d (Business Day, Dec. 30): The failure of General Motors to take appropriate actions when it learned that a defective ignition switch in vehicles it sold caused the injuries and deaths of innocent people speaks volumes about corporate morality and accountability. That is why plaintiffs must be able to sue without caps. The history of corporations\u2019 failure to protect the public is replete with such stories, from flammable pajamas to the lack of safety guards on dangerous machinery. Without the threat of recovery from lawsuits brought by plaintiffs and the potential for punitive damages, corporations have shown that they will not do what is morally required, but merely weigh the costs against the risks and take steps to discourage those who have suffered personal injuries and/or deaths of loved ones from suing.", "sentence_answer": "The history of corporations\u2019 failure to protect the public is replete with such stories, from flammable pajamas to the lack of safety guards on dangerous machinery."} +{"question": "What do the lawyers want the plaintiffs to be able to do?", "paragraph": "Re \u201cFalling Through the Legal Cracks\u201d (Business Day, Dec. 30): The failure of General Motors to take appropriate actions when it learned that a defective ignition switch in vehicles it sold caused the injuries and deaths of innocent people speaks volumes about corporate morality and accountability. That is why plaintiffs must be able to sue without caps. The history of corporations\u2019 failure to protect the public is replete with such stories, from flammable pajamas to the lack of safety guards on dangerous machinery. Without the threat of recovery from lawsuits brought by plaintiffs and the potential for punitive damages, corporations have shown that they will not do what is morally required, but merely weigh the costs against the risks and take steps to discourage those who have suffered personal injuries and/or deaths of loved ones from suing.", "answer": "sue without caps", "sentence": "That is why plaintiffs must be able to sue without caps .", "paragraph_sentence": "Re \u201cFalling Through the Legal Cracks\u201d (Business Day, Dec. 30): The failure of General Motors to take appropriate actions when it learned that a defective ignition switch in vehicles it sold caused the injuries and deaths of innocent people speaks volumes about corporate morality and accountability. That is why plaintiffs must be able to sue without caps . The history of corporations\u2019 failure to protect the public is replete with such stories, from flammable pajamas to the lack of safety guards on dangerous machinery. Without the threat of recovery from lawsuits brought by plaintiffs and the potential for punitive damages, corporations have shown that they will not do what is morally required, but merely weigh the costs against the risks and take steps to discourage those who have suffered personal injuries and/or deaths of loved ones from suing.", "paragraph_answer": "Re \u201cFalling Through the Legal Cracks\u201d (Business Day, Dec. 30): The failure of General Motors to take appropriate actions when it learned that a defective ignition switch in vehicles it sold caused the injuries and deaths of innocent people speaks volumes about corporate morality and accountability. That is why plaintiffs must be able to sue without caps . The history of corporations\u2019 failure to protect the public is replete with such stories, from flammable pajamas to the lack of safety guards on dangerous machinery. Without the threat of recovery from lawsuits brought by plaintiffs and the potential for punitive damages, corporations have shown that they will not do what is morally required, but merely weigh the costs against the risks and take steps to discourage those who have suffered personal injuries and/or deaths of loved ones from suing.", "sentence_answer": "That is why plaintiffs must be able to sue without caps ."} +{"question": "Which particular part was defective in the General Motors made vehicles?", "paragraph": "Re \u201cFalling Through the Legal Cracks\u201d (Business Day, Dec. 30): The failure of General Motors to take appropriate actions when it learned that a defective ignition switch in vehicles it sold caused the injuries and deaths of innocent people speaks volumes about corporate morality and accountability. That is why plaintiffs must be able to sue without caps. The history of corporations\u2019 failure to protect the public is replete with such stories, from flammable pajamas to the lack of safety guards on dangerous machinery. Without the threat of recovery from lawsuits brought by plaintiffs and the potential for punitive damages, corporations have shown that they will not do what is morally required, but merely weigh the costs against the risks and take steps to discourage those who have suffered personal injuries and/or deaths of loved ones from suing.", "answer": "ignition switch", "sentence": "Re \u201cFalling Through the Legal Cracks\u201d (Business Day, Dec. 30): The failure of General Motors to take appropriate actions when it learned that a defective ignition switch in vehicles it sold caused the injuries and deaths of innocent people speaks volumes about corporate morality and accountability.", "paragraph_sentence": " Re \u201cFalling Through the Legal Cracks\u201d (Business Day, Dec. 30): The failure of General Motors to take appropriate actions when it learned that a defective ignition switch in vehicles it sold caused the injuries and deaths of innocent people speaks volumes about corporate morality and accountability. That is why plaintiffs must be able to sue without caps. The history of corporations\u2019 failure to protect the public is replete with such stories, from flammable pajamas to the lack of safety guards on dangerous machinery. Without the threat of recovery from lawsuits brought by plaintiffs and the potential for punitive damages, corporations have shown that they will not do what is morally required, but merely weigh the costs against the risks and take steps to discourage those who have suffered personal injuries and/or deaths of loved ones from suing.", "paragraph_answer": "Re \u201cFalling Through the Legal Cracks\u201d (Business Day, Dec. 30): The failure of General Motors to take appropriate actions when it learned that a defective ignition switch in vehicles it sold caused the injuries and deaths of innocent people speaks volumes about corporate morality and accountability. That is why plaintiffs must be able to sue without caps. The history of corporations\u2019 failure to protect the public is replete with such stories, from flammable pajamas to the lack of safety guards on dangerous machinery. Without the threat of recovery from lawsuits brought by plaintiffs and the potential for punitive damages, corporations have shown that they will not do what is morally required, but merely weigh the costs against the risks and take steps to discourage those who have suffered personal injuries and/or deaths of loved ones from suing.", "sentence_answer": "Re \u201cFalling Through the Legal Cracks\u201d (Business Day, Dec. 30): The failure of General Motors to take appropriate actions when it learned that a defective ignition switch in vehicles it sold caused the injuries and deaths of innocent people speaks volumes about corporate morality and accountability."} +{"question": "Mr. Rodham has attempted to leverage his connections with whom in order to further business interests?", "paragraph": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "answer": "President Bill Clinton", "sentence": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton , to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes.", "paragraph_sentence": " On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton , to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "paragraph_answer": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton , to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "sentence_answer": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton , to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes."} +{"question": "Mr. Rodham describes his occupations as what?", "paragraph": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "answer": "facilitator,", "sentence": "The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201c facilitator, \u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti.", "paragraph_sentence": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201c facilitator, \u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "paragraph_answer": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201c facilitator, \u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "sentence_answer": "The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201c facilitator, \u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti."} +{"question": "In Haiti, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought to raise how much to rebuild homes?", "paragraph": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "answer": "leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help.", "sentence": "But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country.", "paragraph_sentence": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "paragraph_answer": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "sentence_answer": "But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country."} +{"question": "In his own words, why does Mr. Rodham prefer to deal through the Clinton Foundation?", "paragraph": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "answer": "That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,", "sentence": "That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials, \u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony.", "paragraph_sentence": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials, \u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "paragraph_answer": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials, \u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "sentence_answer": " That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials, \u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony."} +{"question": "Why has Mr. Rodham's connection to the Clintons raised eyebrows?", "paragraph": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "answer": "leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help.", "sentence": "But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country.", "paragraph_sentence": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "paragraph_answer": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "sentence_answer": "But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country."} +{"question": "How is Hillary Clinton related to Mr. Rodman", "paragraph": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "answer": "his sister", "sentence": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes.", "paragraph_sentence": " On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "paragraph_answer": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "sentence_answer": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes."} +{"question": "What are some of the ventures that Mr. Rodman has done for the Clintons?", "paragraph": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "answer": "addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board", "sentence": "The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti.", "paragraph_sentence": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "paragraph_answer": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "sentence_answer": "The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti."} +{"question": "What did the company do that Mr. Rodman was on an advisory board for?", "paragraph": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "answer": "mine for gold in Haiti", "sentence": "The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti .", "paragraph_sentence": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti . But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "paragraph_answer": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti . But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "sentence_answer": "The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti ."} +{"question": "How much money was Mr. Rodman and his partners asking for to rebuild homes in Haiti after the earthquake they suffered?", "paragraph": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "answer": "$22 million deal", "sentence": "When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country.", "paragraph_sentence": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "paragraph_answer": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "sentence_answer": "When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country."} +{"question": "How did Mr. Rodman say he got in contact with Haitian officials when attempting rebuild homes in the country?", "paragraph": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation. That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "answer": "through the Clinton Foundation", "sentence": "\u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation .", "paragraph_sentence": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation . That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "paragraph_answer": "On and off for two decades, the affable Mr. Rodham has tried to use his connections with his sister and his brother-in-law, former President Bill Clinton, to further a business career that has seen more failures than successes. The connections to the Clintons have given Mr. Rodham, a self-described \u201cfacilitator,\u201d a unique appeal and a range of opportunities, like addressing Chinese investor conferences and joining an advisory board of a company seeking permission to mine for gold in Haiti. But his business dealings have often invited public scrutiny and uncomfortable questions for the Clintons as Mr. Rodham has cycled through a variety of ventures, leveraging his ties to them and sometimes directly seeking their help. When Mr. Clinton worked as a co-chairman of Haiti\u2019s earthquake recovery commission, Mr. Rodham and his partners sought a $22 million deal to rebuild homes in the country. In court proceedings three years ago in an unrelated lawsuit, Mr. Rodham explained how \u201ca guy in Haiti\u201d had \u201cdonated\u201d 10,000 acres of land to him and described how he had leaned on Mr. Clinton to get the rebuilding project funded amid bureaucratic delays. \u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation . That gets me in touch with the Haitian officials,\u201d Mr. Rodham said, according to a transcript of his testimony. \u201cI hound my brother-in-law, because it\u2019s his fund that we\u2019re going to get our money from. And he can\u2019t do it until the Haitian government does it.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI deal through the Clinton Foundation ."} +{"question": "Who helped Mr. Rodham get a job in 2010 when he was short on money?", "paragraph": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "answer": "Mr. Clinton", "sentence": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia.", "paragraph_sentence": " When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "paragraph_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "sentence_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia."} +{"question": "What enterprise was Mr. Rodham's job with?", "paragraph": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "answer": "GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company", "sentence": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia.", "paragraph_sentence": " When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "paragraph_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "sentence_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia."} +{"question": "GreenTech Automotive was owned by Terry McAuliffe, who held what government position in Virginia?", "paragraph": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "answer": "governor", "sentence": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia.", "paragraph_sentence": " When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "paragraph_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "sentence_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia."} +{"question": "Mr. Rodham was embroiled in litigation from a lawsuit over what issue?", "paragraph": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "answer": "unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case", "sentence": "And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case .", "paragraph_sentence": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case . A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "paragraph_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case . A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "sentence_answer": "And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case ."} +{"question": "What job did Mr. Clinton help Mr. Rodman get in 2010?", "paragraph": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "answer": "raising investments in GreenTech Automotive", "sentence": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive , an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia.", "paragraph_sentence": " When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive , an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "paragraph_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive , an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "sentence_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive , an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia."} +{"question": "What kind of company is Greentech Automotive?", "paragraph": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "answer": "an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe", "sentence": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe , an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia.", "paragraph_sentence": " When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe , an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "paragraph_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe , an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "sentence_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe , an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia."} +{"question": "What state is Terry McAuliffe governor of?", "paragraph": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "answer": "Virginia.", "sentence": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money.", "paragraph_sentence": " When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "paragraph_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "sentence_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money."} +{"question": "Why was Mr. Rodman in court?", "paragraph": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "answer": "unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case", "sentence": "And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case .", "paragraph_sentence": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case . A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "paragraph_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case . A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "sentence_answer": "And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case ."} +{"question": "Who did Mr. Clinton ask to help Mr. Rodman get a job?", "paragraph": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe, an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "answer": "Terry McAuliffe", "sentence": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe , an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia.", "paragraph_sentence": " When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe , an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "paragraph_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe , an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia. \u201cI was complaining to my brother-in-law I didn\u2019t have any money. And he asked McAuliffe to give me a job,\u201d Mr. Rodham said during the court proceedings, which were the result of a lawsuit over unpaid legal bills filed by his lawyer in a child support case. A brother down on his luck seeking help from more successful siblings is a familiar story, and presidents and their families have hardly been immune from that sometimes uncomfortable situation. For the Clintons, Tony Rodham has not been the only source of embarrassment.", "sentence_answer": "When Mr. Rodham was short on cash in 2010, Mr. Clinton helped get him a job for $72,000 a year raising investments in GreenTech Automotive, an electric car company then owned by Terry McAuliffe , an old friend of Mr. Clinton\u2019s and now the governor of Virginia."} +{"question": "During Mrs. Clinton's 2016 campaign, who emerged as a controversial figure?", "paragraph": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "answer": "Tony Rodham", "sentence": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure.", "paragraph_sentence": " As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "paragraph_answer": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "sentence_answer": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure."} +{"question": "GreenTech was investigated by the government, the results of which concluded what?", "paragraph": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "answer": "GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program", "sentence": "A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program , had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications.", "paragraph_sentence": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program , had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "paragraph_answer": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program , had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "sentence_answer": "A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program , had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications."} +{"question": "GreenTech allegedly received special treatment in the handling of what?", "paragraph": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "answer": "visa applications.", "sentence": "A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "paragraph_sentence": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process. ", "paragraph_answer": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "sentence_answer": "A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process."} +{"question": "Which Department did Mr. Auliffe and Mr. Rodham contact in order to issue complaints about visa issues?", "paragraph": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "answer": "Department of Homeland Security", "sentence": "The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "paragraph_sentence": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process. ", "paragraph_answer": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "sentence_answer": "The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process."} +{"question": "What was a Greentech trying to get for their Chinese Investors?", "paragraph": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "answer": "green cards", "sentence": "A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications.", "paragraph_sentence": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "paragraph_answer": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "sentence_answer": "A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications."} +{"question": "What were Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodman accused of doing?", "paragraph": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "answer": "contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "sentence": "The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "paragraph_sentence": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process. ", "paragraph_answer": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process. ", "sentence_answer": "The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process. "} +{"question": "What did Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodman receive as a result of their pressuring of the DHS?", "paragraph": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "answer": "received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications.", "sentence": "A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "paragraph_sentence": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process. ", "paragraph_answer": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "sentence_answer": "A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process."} +{"question": "What relatives of the Clintons were no longer in the picture by spring of 2016?", "paragraph": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "answer": "Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton", "sentence": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure.", "paragraph_sentence": " As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "paragraph_answer": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure. A government investigation in March found that GreenTech, which sought green cards for its Chinese investors through an American government program, had received special treatment in the handling of its visa applications. The report described instances when Mr. McAuliffe and Mr. Rodham contacted an official from the Department of Homeland Security to complain about the pace of the visa process.", "sentence_answer": "As Mrs. Clinton began her 2016 campaign for the presidency, Hugh Rodham and Roger Clinton had faded from public view, but Tony Rodham emerged as a controversial figure."} +{"question": "The Haiti project was the result of Mr. Rodham being contacted by who?", "paragraph": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "answer": "Sheldon Drobny", "sentence": "That project came about when Sheldon Drobny , an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti.", "paragraph_sentence": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny , an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny , an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "That project came about when Sheldon Drobny , an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti."} +{"question": "What was Mr. Drobny's connection to Mr. Rodham?", "paragraph": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "answer": "an old friend", "sentence": "That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend , contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti.", "paragraph_sentence": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend , contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend , contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend , contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti."} +{"question": "Mr. Drobny co-founded what talk network?", "paragraph": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "answer": "Air America Radio", "sentence": "Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio , the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview.", "paragraph_sentence": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio , the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio , the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio , the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview."} +{"question": "What was the political leaning of Mr. Drobny's talk network?", "paragraph": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "answer": "liberal", "sentence": "Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview.", "paragraph_sentence": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview."} +{"question": "What was Sheldon Drobny helping Mr. Rodman with?", "paragraph": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "answer": "making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor", "sentence": "That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor , who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti.", "paragraph_sentence": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor , who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor , who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor , who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti."} +{"question": "What was Mr. Drobny a co-founder of?", "paragraph": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "answer": "Air America Radio", "sentence": "Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio , the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview.", "paragraph_sentence": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio , the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio , the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio , the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview."} +{"question": "What Mr. Drobny's reasoning for helping Mr. Rodman in building homes in Haiti?", "paragraph": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "answer": "humanitarian", "sentence": "He called the effort \u201c humanitarian .", "paragraph_sentence": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201c humanitarian . \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201c humanitarian .\u201d", "sentence_answer": "He called the effort \u201c humanitarian ."} +{"question": "What network was Air American Radio apart of?", "paragraph": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network, said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "answer": "liberal talk network", "sentence": "Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network , said in a phone interview.", "paragraph_sentence": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network , said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Even more important, according to Mr. Rodham, was what he said was going to be Mr. Clinton\u2019s help on his Haiti rebuilding project. That project came about when Sheldon Drobny, an old friend, contacted Mr. Rodham about making a connection for a Chicago-area contractor, who wanted to become involved in building houses in Haiti. \u201cWe were trying to help. Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network , said in a phone interview. He called the effort \u201chumanitarian.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Period,\u201d Mr. Drobny, a co-founder of Air America Radio, the former liberal talk network , said in a phone interview."} +{"question": "The Clinton Foundation issued a statement suggestions what?", "paragraph": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "answer": "aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects.", "sentence": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "sentence_answer": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo."} +{"question": "How many projects were submitted to the Clinton Foundation in regards to the Haiti project?", "paragraph": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "answer": "300", "sentence": "The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "sentence_answer": "The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo."} +{"question": "In Mr. Rodham's income projection for the Haiti deal, he had hoped to cover what expenses?", "paragraph": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "answer": "take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes.", "sentence": "Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg."} +{"question": "What was Mr. Rodham's former lawyer's name?", "paragraph": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "answer": "Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg", "sentence": "Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg .", "paragraph_sentence": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg . Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg . Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg ."} +{"question": "How much was Mr. Rodman expecting from the housing deal in Haiti if it went through?", "paragraph": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "answer": "$1 million", "sentence": "Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes."} +{"question": "What did the Clinton Foundation do in Haiti?", "paragraph": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "answer": "supporting a housing exposition in Haiti", "sentence": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti , it had not been directly involved with any housing projects.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti , it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti , it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "sentence_answer": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti , it had not been directly involved with any housing projects."} +{"question": "What did the foundation claim about Mr. Rodman's project?", "paragraph": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "answer": "had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration", "sentence": "The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "sentence_answer": "The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo."} +{"question": "What would the deal do for Mr. Rodman if it was accepted?", "paragraph": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "answer": "take his family to Disney World and cover his debts", "sentence": "Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts , including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts , including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts , including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts , including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes."} +{"question": "What was Mr. Rodman able to do after the legal proceedings?", "paragraph": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "answer": "eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg.", "sentence": "Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Clinton Foundation said in its statement that aside from supporting a housing exposition in Haiti, it had not been directly involved with any housing projects. The foundation also said Mr. Rodham\u2019s project had not been among the more than 300 submitted for consideration at the expo. Mr. Rodham projected that he could make $1 million on the Haiti deal if it came to pass \u2014 enough money, he said in his court testimony, to take his family to Disney World and cover his debts, including his legal bills and his long overdue federal taxes. Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham. \u201cI found a lot of good in Tony,\u201d she said.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Rodham eventually settled his bill with his former lawyer, Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg. Ms. Carlberg said in a phone interview that, despite her lawsuit, she did not have a negative view of Mr. Rodham."} +{"question": "What religion was Ben Lowe?", "paragraph": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa. A relentless warming of the lake was reducing the catch of fish, the people were going hungry \u2014 and he had learned of scientific evidence that climate change was to blame. For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois, the moment came in a college classroom. Studying the fallout from environmental degradation, he learned of poor people who had to walk hours longer each day to gather firewood from depleted forests. For both men, Christian duties that their upbringing had led them to regard as separate \u2014 taking care of the earth and taking care of the poor \u2014 merged into a morally urgent problem. \u201cWhy haven\u2019t I ever made this connection before?\u201d Mr. Sauder recalled asking himself.", "answer": "Christian", "sentence": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa.", "paragraph_sentence": " For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa. A relentless warming of the lake was reducing the catch of fish, the people were going hungry \u2014 and he had learned of scientific evidence that climate change was to blame. For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois, the moment came in a college classroom. Studying the fallout from environmental degradation, he learned of poor people who had to walk hours longer each day to gather firewood from depleted forests. For both men, Christian duties that their upbringing had led them to regard as separate \u2014 taking care of the earth and taking care of the poor \u2014 merged into a morally urgent problem. \u201cWhy haven\u2019t I ever made this connection before?\u201d Mr. Sauder recalled asking himself.", "paragraph_answer": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa. A relentless warming of the lake was reducing the catch of fish, the people were going hungry \u2014 and he had learned of scientific evidence that climate change was to blame. For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois, the moment came in a college classroom. Studying the fallout from environmental degradation, he learned of poor people who had to walk hours longer each day to gather firewood from depleted forests. For both men, Christian duties that their upbringing had led them to regard as separate \u2014 taking care of the earth and taking care of the poor \u2014 merged into a morally urgent problem. \u201cWhy haven\u2019t I ever made this connection before?\u201d Mr. Sauder recalled asking himself.", "sentence_answer": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa."} +{"question": "In which state is Rev. Brian Sauder from?", "paragraph": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa. A relentless warming of the lake was reducing the catch of fish, the people were going hungry \u2014 and he had learned of scientific evidence that climate change was to blame. For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois, the moment came in a college classroom. Studying the fallout from environmental degradation, he learned of poor people who had to walk hours longer each day to gather firewood from depleted forests. For both men, Christian duties that their upbringing had led them to regard as separate \u2014 taking care of the earth and taking care of the poor \u2014 merged into a morally urgent problem. \u201cWhy haven\u2019t I ever made this connection before?\u201d Mr. Sauder recalled asking himself.", "answer": "Illinois", "sentence": "For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois , the moment came in a college classroom.", "paragraph_sentence": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa. A relentless warming of the lake was reducing the catch of fish, the people were going hungry \u2014 and he had learned of scientific evidence that climate change was to blame. For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois , the moment came in a college classroom. Studying the fallout from environmental degradation, he learned of poor people who had to walk hours longer each day to gather firewood from depleted forests. For both men, Christian duties that their upbringing had led them to regard as separate \u2014 taking care of the earth and taking care of the poor \u2014 merged into a morally urgent problem. \u201cWhy haven\u2019t I ever made this connection before?\u201d Mr. Sauder recalled asking himself.", "paragraph_answer": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa. A relentless warming of the lake was reducing the catch of fish, the people were going hungry \u2014 and he had learned of scientific evidence that climate change was to blame. For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois , the moment came in a college classroom. Studying the fallout from environmental degradation, he learned of poor people who had to walk hours longer each day to gather firewood from depleted forests. For both men, Christian duties that their upbringing had led them to regard as separate \u2014 taking care of the earth and taking care of the poor \u2014 merged into a morally urgent problem. \u201cWhy haven\u2019t I ever made this connection before?\u201d Mr. Sauder recalled asking himself.", "sentence_answer": "For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois , the moment came in a college classroom."} +{"question": "Where did the Rev. Brian Sauder realize the significance of climate change?", "paragraph": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa. A relentless warming of the lake was reducing the catch of fish, the people were going hungry \u2014 and he had learned of scientific evidence that climate change was to blame. For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois, the moment came in a college classroom. Studying the fallout from environmental degradation, he learned of poor people who had to walk hours longer each day to gather firewood from depleted forests. For both men, Christian duties that their upbringing had led them to regard as separate \u2014 taking care of the earth and taking care of the poor \u2014 merged into a morally urgent problem. \u201cWhy haven\u2019t I ever made this connection before?\u201d Mr. Sauder recalled asking himself.", "answer": "college classroom", "sentence": "a college classroom .", "paragraph_sentence": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa. A relentless warming of the lake was reducing the catch of fish, the people were going hungry \u2014 and he had learned of scientific evidence that climate change was to blame. For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois, the moment came in a college classroom . Studying the fallout from environmental degradation, he learned of poor people who had to walk hours longer each day to gather firewood from depleted forests. For both men, Christian duties that their upbringing had led them to regard as separate \u2014 taking care of the earth and taking care of the poor \u2014 merged into a morally urgent problem. \u201cWhy haven\u2019t I ever made this connection before?\u201d Mr. Sauder recalled asking himself.", "paragraph_answer": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa. A relentless warming of the lake was reducing the catch of fish, the people were going hungry \u2014 and he had learned of scientific evidence that climate change was to blame. For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois, the moment came in a college classroom . Studying the fallout from environmental degradation, he learned of poor people who had to walk hours longer each day to gather firewood from depleted forests. For both men, Christian duties that their upbringing had led them to regard as separate \u2014 taking care of the earth and taking care of the poor \u2014 merged into a morally urgent problem. \u201cWhy haven\u2019t I ever made this connection before?\u201d Mr. Sauder recalled asking himself.", "sentence_answer": "a college classroom ."} +{"question": "What continent is Ben Lowe from?", "paragraph": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa. A relentless warming of the lake was reducing the catch of fish, the people were going hungry \u2014 and he had learned of scientific evidence that climate change was to blame. For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois, the moment came in a college classroom. Studying the fallout from environmental degradation, he learned of poor people who had to walk hours longer each day to gather firewood from depleted forests. For both men, Christian duties that their upbringing had led them to regard as separate \u2014 taking care of the earth and taking care of the poor \u2014 merged into a morally urgent problem. \u201cWhy haven\u2019t I ever made this connection before?\u201d Mr. Sauder recalled asking himself.", "answer": "Africa", "sentence": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa .", "paragraph_sentence": " For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa . A relentless warming of the lake was reducing the catch of fish, the people were going hungry \u2014 and he had learned of scientific evidence that climate change was to blame. For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois, the moment came in a college classroom. Studying the fallout from environmental degradation, he learned of poor people who had to walk hours longer each day to gather firewood from depleted forests. For both men, Christian duties that their upbringing had led them to regard as separate \u2014 taking care of the earth and taking care of the poor \u2014 merged into a morally urgent problem. \u201cWhy haven\u2019t I ever made this connection before?\u201d Mr. Sauder recalled asking himself.", "paragraph_answer": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa . A relentless warming of the lake was reducing the catch of fish, the people were going hungry \u2014 and he had learned of scientific evidence that climate change was to blame. For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois, the moment came in a college classroom. Studying the fallout from environmental degradation, he learned of poor people who had to walk hours longer each day to gather firewood from depleted forests. For both men, Christian duties that their upbringing had led them to regard as separate \u2014 taking care of the earth and taking care of the poor \u2014 merged into a morally urgent problem. \u201cWhy haven\u2019t I ever made this connection before?\u201d Mr. Sauder recalled asking himself.", "sentence_answer": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa ."} +{"question": "What Christian movement was Rev. Brian Sauder part of when growing up in Illinois?", "paragraph": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa. A relentless warming of the lake was reducing the catch of fish, the people were going hungry \u2014 and he had learned of scientific evidence that climate change was to blame. For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois, the moment came in a college classroom. Studying the fallout from environmental degradation, he learned of poor people who had to walk hours longer each day to gather firewood from depleted forests. For both men, Christian duties that their upbringing had led them to regard as separate \u2014 taking care of the earth and taking care of the poor \u2014 merged into a morally urgent problem. \u201cWhy haven\u2019t I ever made this connection before?\u201d Mr. Sauder recalled asking himself.", "answer": "Anabaptist", "sentence": "For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois, the moment came in a college classroom.", "paragraph_sentence": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa. A relentless warming of the lake was reducing the catch of fish, the people were going hungry \u2014 and he had learned of scientific evidence that climate change was to blame. For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois, the moment came in a college classroom. Studying the fallout from environmental degradation, he learned of poor people who had to walk hours longer each day to gather firewood from depleted forests. For both men, Christian duties that their upbringing had led them to regard as separate \u2014 taking care of the earth and taking care of the poor \u2014 merged into a morally urgent problem. \u201cWhy haven\u2019t I ever made this connection before?\u201d Mr. Sauder recalled asking himself.", "paragraph_answer": "For an earnest young Christian named Ben Lowe, revelation came on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, in Africa. A relentless warming of the lake was reducing the catch of fish, the people were going hungry \u2014 and he had learned of scientific evidence that climate change was to blame. For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois, the moment came in a college classroom. Studying the fallout from environmental degradation, he learned of poor people who had to walk hours longer each day to gather firewood from depleted forests. For both men, Christian duties that their upbringing had led them to regard as separate \u2014 taking care of the earth and taking care of the poor \u2014 merged into a morally urgent problem. \u201cWhy haven\u2019t I ever made this connection before?\u201d Mr. Sauder recalled asking himself.", "sentence_answer": "For the Rev. Brian Sauder, who grew up attending a small Anabaptist church in rural Illinois, the moment came in a college classroom."} +{"question": "Which Old Testament Book in the Bible has God granting dominion to human beings over all other beings?", "paragraph": "Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d", "answer": "Genesis", "sentence": "Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d"} +{"question": "Which chapter of Genesis references that God grants dominion to human beings over all other beings?", "paragraph": "Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d", "answer": "first", "sentence": "Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d"} +{"question": "Who did God reference as having dominion over all other beings in the first chapter of Genesis?", "paragraph": "Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d", "answer": "human beings", "sentence": "Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d"} +{"question": "Who grants dominion to human beings over all other beings in the first chapter of Genesis?", "paragraph": "Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d", "answer": "God", "sentence": "Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d"} +{"question": "In addition to Christians, what other religious group discusses what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings dominion over all other beings?", "paragraph": "Among Christians and Jews, theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d", "answer": "Jews", "sentence": "Among Christians and Jews , theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Among Christians and Jews , theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Among Christians and Jews , theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Among Christians and Jews , theological discussion sometimes centers on exactly what God meant in the first chapter of Genesis when he granted human beings \u201cdominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.\u201d"} +{"question": "How many American rabbis recently issued a letter declaring that the time for environmental action is now?", "paragraph": "Perhaps the biggest question now is whether rising concern about the environment among religious groups will translate into stronger political demands that governments find ways to reduce the cost of low-carbon energy supplies, improve their reliability and speed their deployment. This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand. \u201cThe hope is that over and over in our history, when our country faced the need for profound change, it has been our communities of moral commitment, religious covenant and spiritual search that have arisen to meet the need,\u201d the rabbis declared. \u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d", "answer": "more than 350", "sentence": "This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand.", "paragraph_sentence": "Perhaps the biggest question now is whether rising concern about the environment among religious groups will translate into stronger political demands that governments find ways to reduce the cost of low-carbon energy supplies, improve their reliability and speed their deployment. This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand. \u201cThe hope is that over and over in our history, when our country faced the need for profound change, it has been our communities of moral commitment, religious covenant and spiritual search that have arisen to meet the need,\u201d the rabbis declared. \u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps the biggest question now is whether rising concern about the environment among religious groups will translate into stronger political demands that governments find ways to reduce the cost of low-carbon energy supplies, improve their reliability and speed their deployment. This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand. \u201cThe hope is that over and over in our history, when our country faced the need for profound change, it has been our communities of moral commitment, religious covenant and spiritual search that have arisen to meet the need,\u201d the rabbis declared. \u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand."} +{"question": "What communication did more than 350 American rabbis recently use to declare that environmental action needs to taken now?", "paragraph": "Perhaps the biggest question now is whether rising concern about the environment among religious groups will translate into stronger political demands that governments find ways to reduce the cost of low-carbon energy supplies, improve their reliability and speed their deployment. This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand. \u201cThe hope is that over and over in our history, when our country faced the need for profound change, it has been our communities of moral commitment, religious covenant and spiritual search that have arisen to meet the need,\u201d the rabbis declared. \u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d", "answer": "a letter", "sentence": "This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand.", "paragraph_sentence": "Perhaps the biggest question now is whether rising concern about the environment among religious groups will translate into stronger political demands that governments find ways to reduce the cost of low-carbon energy supplies, improve their reliability and speed their deployment. This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand. \u201cThe hope is that over and over in our history, when our country faced the need for profound change, it has been our communities of moral commitment, religious covenant and spiritual search that have arisen to meet the need,\u201d the rabbis declared. \u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps the biggest question now is whether rising concern about the environment among religious groups will translate into stronger political demands that governments find ways to reduce the cost of low-carbon energy supplies, improve their reliability and speed their deployment. This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand. \u201cThe hope is that over and over in our history, when our country faced the need for profound change, it has been our communities of moral commitment, religious covenant and spiritual search that have arisen to meet the need,\u201d the rabbis declared. \u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand."} +{"question": "What movement from 50 years ago did the American rabbis reference in their letter declaring the need for environmental action?", "paragraph": "Perhaps the biggest question now is whether rising concern about the environment among religious groups will translate into stronger political demands that governments find ways to reduce the cost of low-carbon energy supplies, improve their reliability and speed their deployment. This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand. \u201cThe hope is that over and over in our history, when our country faced the need for profound change, it has been our communities of moral commitment, religious covenant and spiritual search that have arisen to meet the need,\u201d the rabbis declared. \u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d", "answer": "civil rights", "sentence": "\u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Perhaps the biggest question now is whether rising concern about the environment among religious groups will translate into stronger political demands that governments find ways to reduce the cost of low-carbon energy supplies, improve their reliability and speed their deployment. This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand. \u201cThe hope is that over and over in our history, when our country faced the need for profound change, it has been our communities of moral commitment, religious covenant and spiritual search that have arisen to meet the need,\u201d the rabbis declared. \u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps the biggest question now is whether rising concern about the environment among religious groups will translate into stronger political demands that governments find ways to reduce the cost of low-carbon energy supplies, improve their reliability and speed their deployment. This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand. \u201cThe hope is that over and over in our history, when our country faced the need for profound change, it has been our communities of moral commitment, religious covenant and spiritual search that have arisen to meet the need,\u201d the rabbis declared. \u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d"} +{"question": "How long ago was the civil rights movement that the American rabbis compared to the current environmental movement in their letter calling for action?", "paragraph": "Perhaps the biggest question now is whether rising concern about the environment among religious groups will translate into stronger political demands that governments find ways to reduce the cost of low-carbon energy supplies, improve their reliability and speed their deployment. This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand. \u201cThe hope is that over and over in our history, when our country faced the need for profound change, it has been our communities of moral commitment, religious covenant and spiritual search that have arisen to meet the need,\u201d the rabbis declared. \u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d", "answer": "50 years ago", "sentence": "\u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Perhaps the biggest question now is whether rising concern about the environment among religious groups will translate into stronger political demands that governments find ways to reduce the cost of low-carbon energy supplies, improve their reliability and speed their deployment. This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand. \u201cThe hope is that over and over in our history, when our country faced the need for profound change, it has been our communities of moral commitment, religious covenant and spiritual search that have arisen to meet the need,\u201d the rabbis declared. \u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps the biggest question now is whether rising concern about the environment among religious groups will translate into stronger political demands that governments find ways to reduce the cost of low-carbon energy supplies, improve their reliability and speed their deployment. This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand. \u201cThe hope is that over and over in our history, when our country faced the need for profound change, it has been our communities of moral commitment, religious covenant and spiritual search that have arisen to meet the need,\u201d the rabbis declared. \u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d"} +{"question": "What type of energy supplies are American rabbis requesting that governments find way to lower the cost of?", "paragraph": "Perhaps the biggest question now is whether rising concern about the environment among religious groups will translate into stronger political demands that governments find ways to reduce the cost of low-carbon energy supplies, improve their reliability and speed their deployment. This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand. \u201cThe hope is that over and over in our history, when our country faced the need for profound change, it has been our communities of moral commitment, religious covenant and spiritual search that have arisen to meet the need,\u201d the rabbis declared. \u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d", "answer": "low-carbon", "sentence": "Perhaps the biggest question now is whether rising concern about the environment among religious groups will translate into stronger political demands that governments find ways to reduce the cost of low-carbon energy supplies, improve their reliability and speed their deployment.", "paragraph_sentence": " Perhaps the biggest question now is whether rising concern about the environment among religious groups will translate into stronger political demands that governments find ways to reduce the cost of low-carbon energy supplies, improve their reliability and speed their deployment. This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand. \u201cThe hope is that over and over in our history, when our country faced the need for profound change, it has been our communities of moral commitment, religious covenant and spiritual search that have arisen to meet the need,\u201d the rabbis declared. \u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps the biggest question now is whether rising concern about the environment among religious groups will translate into stronger political demands that governments find ways to reduce the cost of low-carbon energy supplies, improve their reliability and speed their deployment. This month, more than 350 American rabbis issued a letter of their own, declaring that the time for action was at hand. \u201cThe hope is that over and over in our history, when our country faced the need for profound change, it has been our communities of moral commitment, religious covenant and spiritual search that have arisen to meet the need,\u201d the rabbis declared. \u201cSo it was 50 years ago during the civil rights movement, and so it must be today.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Perhaps the biggest question now is whether rising concern about the environment among religious groups will translate into stronger political demands that governments find ways to reduce the cost of low-carbon energy supplies, improve their reliability and speed their deployment."} +{"question": "How many suites is Wild Tales comprised of?", "paragraph": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests. Ms. Rivas\u2019s brewing hysteria and Mr. Gentile\u2019s macho cluelessness are played for both laughs but also something larger and grimmer. They help make a violent Looney Toons bit feel like sick national cataclysm. (Read the review) The HBO All-Stars (Power-Rankings Edition)", "answer": "five", "sentence": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests. Ms. Rivas\u2019s brewing hysteria and Mr. Gentile\u2019s macho cluelessness are played for both laughs but also something larger and grimmer. They help make a violent Looney Toons bit feel like sick national cataclysm. (Read the review) The HBO All-Stars (Power-Rankings Edition)", "paragraph_answer": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests. Ms. Rivas\u2019s brewing hysteria and Mr. Gentile\u2019s macho cluelessness are played for both laughs but also something larger and grimmer. They help make a violent Looney Toons bit feel like sick national cataclysm. (Read the review) The HBO All-Stars (Power-Rankings Edition)", "sentence_answer": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests."} +{"question": "How does the final suite of Wild Tales begin?", "paragraph": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests. Ms. Rivas\u2019s brewing hysteria and Mr. Gentile\u2019s macho cluelessness are played for both laughs but also something larger and grimmer. They help make a violent Looney Toons bit feel like sick national cataclysm. (Read the review) The HBO All-Stars (Power-Rankings Edition)", "answer": "as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception", "sentence": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests. Ms. Rivas\u2019s brewing hysteria and Mr. Gentile\u2019s macho cluelessness are played for both laughs but also something larger and grimmer. They help make a violent Looney Toons bit feel like sick national cataclysm. (Read the review) The HBO All-Stars (Power-Rankings Edition)", "paragraph_answer": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests. Ms. Rivas\u2019s brewing hysteria and Mr. Gentile\u2019s macho cluelessness are played for both laughs but also something larger and grimmer. They help make a violent Looney Toons bit feel like sick national cataclysm. (Read the review) The HBO All-Stars (Power-Rankings Edition)", "sentence_answer": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests."} +{"question": "Which pair star in Wild Tales?", "paragraph": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests. Ms. Rivas\u2019s brewing hysteria and Mr. Gentile\u2019s macho cluelessness are played for both laughs but also something larger and grimmer. They help make a violent Looney Toons bit feel like sick national cataclysm. (Read the review) The HBO All-Stars (Power-Rankings Edition)", "answer": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile", "sentence": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile , \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile , \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests. Ms. Rivas\u2019s brewing hysteria and Mr. Gentile\u2019s macho cluelessness are played for both laughs but also something larger and grimmer. They help make a violent Looney Toons bit feel like sick national cataclysm. (Read the review) The HBO All-Stars (Power-Rankings Edition)", "paragraph_answer": " \u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile , \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests. Ms. Rivas\u2019s brewing hysteria and Mr. Gentile\u2019s macho cluelessness are played for both laughs but also something larger and grimmer. They help make a violent Looney Toons bit feel like sick national cataclysm. (Read the review) The HBO All-Stars (Power-Rankings Edition)", "sentence_answer": " \u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile , \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests."} +{"question": "How does the final suite of Wild Tales end up playing out?", "paragraph": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests. Ms. Rivas\u2019s brewing hysteria and Mr. Gentile\u2019s macho cluelessness are played for both laughs but also something larger and grimmer. They help make a violent Looney Toons bit feel like sick national cataclysm. (Read the review) The HBO All-Stars (Power-Rankings Edition)", "answer": "a war among the betrothed and their guests", "sentence": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests . Ms. Rivas\u2019s brewing hysteria and Mr. Gentile\u2019s macho cluelessness are played for both laughs but also something larger and grimmer. They help make a violent Looney Toons bit feel like sick national cataclysm. (Read the review) The HBO All-Stars (Power-Rankings Edition)", "paragraph_answer": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests . Ms. Rivas\u2019s brewing hysteria and Mr. Gentile\u2019s macho cluelessness are played for both laughs but also something larger and grimmer. They help make a violent Looney Toons bit feel like sick national cataclysm. (Read the review) The HBO All-Stars (Power-Rankings Edition)", "sentence_answer": "\u00c9rica Rivas and Diego Gentile, \u201cWild Tales\u201d Dami\u00e1n Szifr\u00f3n\u2019s tragicomic allegory of modern-day Argentina comprises five suites of perfectly choreographed insanity, the last of which begins as a perfectly ordinary wedding reception and mutates into a war among the betrothed and their guests ."} +{"question": "Which show does Tracee Ellis Ross star in?", "paragraph": "Tracee Ellis Ross, \u201cblack-ish\u201d The degree of difficulty that Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ms. Metcalf and Ms. Nash face on their respective shows is vertiginous. But Ms. Ross works just as hard in her marriage of pragmatism and new-age nuttiness. Her screen time always feels shorter than her co-star Anthony Anderson\u2019s, but she just does more with what she\u2019s got. She\u2019s so good that even when the writers aren\u2019t giving her great comedy, she makes her own. D\u2019Angelo, Apollo Theater, Feb. 7 For an hour, I sat in my seat worried that he wasn\u2019t ready for us \u2014 for the screaming and hooting, for the orgasmic yeses. That mighty voice was tenuous. The pacing on the potent new songs felt rushed. He seemed fatigued. But during two encores, a very good show became unforgettable. D\u2019Angelo locked in and let go. Ready for us? Ha. We weren\u2019t ready for him. (Read the review) More highlights from the year, as chosen by our critics: Movies, Television, Pop Music, Classical Music, Classical Albums, Dance, Theater, Books and Art", "answer": "black-ish", "sentence": "Tracee Ellis Ross, \u201c black-ish \u201d The degree of difficulty that Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ms. Metcalf and Ms. Nash face on their respective shows is vertiginous.", "paragraph_sentence": " Tracee Ellis Ross, \u201c black-ish \u201d The degree of difficulty that Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ms. Metcalf and Ms. Nash face on their respective shows is vertiginous. But Ms. Ross works just as hard in her marriage of pragmatism and new-age nuttiness. Her screen time always feels shorter than her co-star Anthony Anderson\u2019s, but she just does more with what she\u2019s got. She\u2019s so good that even when the writers aren\u2019t giving her great comedy, she makes her own. D\u2019Angelo, Apollo Theater, Feb. 7 For an hour, I sat in my seat worried that he wasn\u2019t ready for us \u2014 for the screaming and hooting, for the orgasmic yeses. That mighty voice was tenuous. The pacing on the potent new songs felt rushed. He seemed fatigued. But during two encores, a very good show became unforgettable. D\u2019Angelo locked in and let go. Ready for us? Ha. We weren\u2019t ready for him. (Read the review) More highlights from the year, as chosen by our critics: Movies, Television, Pop Music, Classical Music, Classical Albums, Dance, Theater, Books and Art", "paragraph_answer": "Tracee Ellis Ross, \u201c black-ish \u201d The degree of difficulty that Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ms. Metcalf and Ms. Nash face on their respective shows is vertiginous. But Ms. Ross works just as hard in her marriage of pragmatism and new-age nuttiness. Her screen time always feels shorter than her co-star Anthony Anderson\u2019s, but she just does more with what she\u2019s got. She\u2019s so good that even when the writers aren\u2019t giving her great comedy, she makes her own. D\u2019Angelo, Apollo Theater, Feb. 7 For an hour, I sat in my seat worried that he wasn\u2019t ready for us \u2014 for the screaming and hooting, for the orgasmic yeses. That mighty voice was tenuous. The pacing on the potent new songs felt rushed. He seemed fatigued. But during two encores, a very good show became unforgettable. D\u2019Angelo locked in and let go. Ready for us? Ha. We weren\u2019t ready for him. (Read the review) More highlights from the year, as chosen by our critics: Movies, Television, Pop Music, Classical Music, Classical Albums, Dance, Theater, Books and Art", "sentence_answer": "Tracee Ellis Ross, \u201c black-ish \u201d The degree of difficulty that Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ms. Metcalf and Ms. Nash face on their respective shows is vertiginous."} +{"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 ."} +{"question": "Who is Ms. Ross's co-star?", "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": "Anthony Anderson", "sentence": "Her screen time always feels shorter than her co-star Anthony Anderson \u2019s, but she just does more with what she\u2019s got.", "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": "Her screen time always feels shorter than her co-star Anthony Anderson \u2019s, but she just does more with what she\u2019s got."} +{"question": "Who makes her own comedy when the writers aren't giving her good material?", "paragraph": "Tracee Ellis Ross, \u201cblack-ish\u201d The degree of difficulty that Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ms. Metcalf and Ms. Nash face on their respective shows is vertiginous. But Ms. Ross works just as hard in her marriage of pragmatism and new-age nuttiness. Her screen time always feels shorter than her co-star Anthony Anderson\u2019s, but she just does more with what she\u2019s got. She\u2019s so good that even when the writers aren\u2019t giving her great comedy, she makes her own. D\u2019Angelo, Apollo Theater, Feb. 7 For an hour, I sat in my seat worried that he wasn\u2019t ready for us \u2014 for the screaming and hooting, for the orgasmic yeses. That mighty voice was tenuous. The pacing on the potent new songs felt rushed. He seemed fatigued. But during two encores, a very good show became unforgettable. D\u2019Angelo locked in and let go. Ready for us? Ha. We weren\u2019t ready for him. (Read the review) More highlights from the year, as chosen by our critics: Movies, Television, Pop Music, Classical Music, Classical Albums, Dance, Theater, Books and Art", "answer": "Tracee Ellis Ross", "sentence": "Tracee Ellis Ross , \u201cblack-ish\u201d The degree of difficulty that Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ms. Metcalf and Ms. Nash face on their respective shows is vertiginous.", "paragraph_sentence": " Tracee Ellis Ross , \u201cblack-ish\u201d The degree of difficulty that Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ms. Metcalf and Ms. Nash face on their respective shows is vertiginous. But Ms. Ross works just as hard in her marriage of pragmatism and new-age nuttiness. Her screen time always feels shorter than her co-star Anthony Anderson\u2019s, but she just does more with what she\u2019s got. She\u2019s so good that even when the writers aren\u2019t giving her great comedy, she makes her own. D\u2019Angelo, Apollo Theater, Feb. 7 For an hour, I sat in my seat worried that he wasn\u2019t ready for us \u2014 for the screaming and hooting, for the orgasmic yeses. That mighty voice was tenuous. The pacing on the potent new songs felt rushed. He seemed fatigued. But during two encores, a very good show became unforgettable. D\u2019Angelo locked in and let go. Ready for us? Ha. We weren\u2019t ready for him. (Read the review) More highlights from the year, as chosen by our critics: Movies, Television, Pop Music, Classical Music, Classical Albums, Dance, Theater, Books and Art", "paragraph_answer": " Tracee Ellis Ross , \u201cblack-ish\u201d The degree of difficulty that Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ms. Metcalf and Ms. Nash face on their respective shows is vertiginous. But Ms. Ross works just as hard in her marriage of pragmatism and new-age nuttiness. Her screen time always feels shorter than her co-star Anthony Anderson\u2019s, but she just does more with what she\u2019s got. She\u2019s so good that even when the writers aren\u2019t giving her great comedy, she makes her own. D\u2019Angelo, Apollo Theater, Feb. 7 For an hour, I sat in my seat worried that he wasn\u2019t ready for us \u2014 for the screaming and hooting, for the orgasmic yeses. That mighty voice was tenuous. The pacing on the potent new songs felt rushed. He seemed fatigued. But during two encores, a very good show became unforgettable. D\u2019Angelo locked in and let go. Ready for us? Ha. We weren\u2019t ready for him. (Read the review) More highlights from the year, as chosen by our critics: Movies, Television, Pop Music, Classical Music, Classical Albums, Dance, Theater, Books and Art", "sentence_answer": " Tracee Ellis Ross , \u201cblack-ish\u201d The degree of difficulty that Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Ms. Metcalf and Ms. Nash face on their respective shows is vertiginous."} +{"question": "What's the smartest decision making app?", "paragraph": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap, because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outcomes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking. If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "answer": "ChoiceMap", "sentence": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap , because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms.", "paragraph_sentence": " Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap , because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outcomes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking. If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap , because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outcomes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking. If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "sentence_answer": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap , because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms."} +{"question": "How do you start?", "paragraph": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap, because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outcomes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking. If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "answer": "the decision to be made, and typed in all the outco", "sentence": "Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outco mes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking.", "paragraph_sentence": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap, because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outco mes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking. If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap, because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outco mes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking. If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "sentence_answer": "Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outco mes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking."} +{"question": "What is free for IOS?", "paragraph": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap, because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outcomes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking. If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "answer": "ChoiceMap", "sentence": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap , because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms.", "paragraph_sentence": " Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap , because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outcomes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking. If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap , because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outcomes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking. If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "sentence_answer": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap , because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms."} +{"question": "What does the app let you to explain?", "paragraph": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap, because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outcomes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking. If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "answer": "all the factors that influence your thinking", "sentence": "Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outcomes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking .", "paragraph_sentence": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap, because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outcomes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking . If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap, because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outcomes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking . If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "sentence_answer": "Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outcomes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking ."} +{"question": "If you decide to go on vacation, what may be the biggest factor?", "paragraph": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap, because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outcomes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking. If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "answer": "cost", "sentence": "If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "paragraph_sentence": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap, because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outcomes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking. If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor. ", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps the smartest decision-making app I\u2019ve used is ChoiceMap, because it\u2019s both really easy to use and it makes it feel as if your decision has been intelligently considered by the app\u2019s algorithms. ChoiceMap, which is free for iOS, tries to make the process as smooth as possible. To start, you describe a choice to make or use one of the app\u2019s many templates on diverse topics, like choosing baby names or which phone carrier to use. Once you have described the decision to be made, and typed in all the outcomes that could result, the app lets you explain all the factors that influence your thinking. If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor.", "sentence_answer": "If you\u2019re trying to decide where to go for a vacation, for example, cost may be the biggest factor."} +{"question": "What app is free on IOS?", "paragraph": "FYI Decision, which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome. If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "answer": "FYI Decision", "sentence": "FYI Decision , which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy.", "paragraph_sentence": " FYI Decision , which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome. If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "paragraph_answer": " FYI Decision , which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome. If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "sentence_answer": " FYI Decision , which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy."} +{"question": "What's an alternate app that can be used instead of ChoiceMap?", "paragraph": "FYI Decision, which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome. If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "answer": "FYI Decision", "sentence": "FYI Decision , which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy.", "paragraph_sentence": " FYI Decision , which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome. If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "paragraph_answer": " FYI Decision , which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome. If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "sentence_answer": " FYI Decision , which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy."} +{"question": "What system is used for rating factors?", "paragraph": "FYI Decision, which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome. If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "answer": "slider", "sentence": "The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision.", "paragraph_sentence": "FYI Decision, which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome. If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "paragraph_answer": "FYI Decision, which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome. If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "sentence_answer": "The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision."} +{"question": "What is the app's strength?", "paragraph": "FYI Decision, which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome. If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "answer": "it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome", "sentence": "But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome .", "paragraph_sentence": "FYI Decision, which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome . If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "paragraph_answer": "FYI Decision, which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome . If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "sentence_answer": "But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome ."} +{"question": "How much does an upgrade cost?", "paragraph": "FYI Decision, which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome. If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "answer": "$3", "sentence": "It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads.", "paragraph_sentence": "FYI Decision, which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome. If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "paragraph_answer": "FYI Decision, which is free for iOS, is a great alternative to ChoiceMap and Decision Buddy. The app works in similar ways, using a slider system for rating how much each of the influencing factors should weigh into the decision. But this app\u2019s strength is that it displays the results more visually, with charts that show how your ratings affected the recommended outcome. If you\u2019re choosing a car to buy, for example, you can see how your concern about price would affect the available models. I love this app\u2019s simplicity, but it\u2019s worth pointing out that it is supported by advertising, and the pop-up ads can be annoying. It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads. The upgrade also allows it to output results as a PDF.", "sentence_answer": "It costs $3 to upgrade to remove the ads."} +{"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."} +{"question": "Who created Decision Maker?", "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": "Jonathan Chow", "sentence": "Decision Maker by Jonathan Chow is a similar, free Android app, although it\u2019s not as attractive.", "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": "Decision Maker by Jonathan Chow is a similar, free Android app, although it\u2019s not as attractive."} +{"question": "What game show is the app similar to?", "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": "wheel of fortune", "sentence": "Think of it like a wheel of fortune .", "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": "Think of it like a wheel of fortune ."} +{"question": "How much is the Decision Maker 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": "free", "sentence": "Decision Maker by Jonathan Chow is a similar, free Android app, although it\u2019s not as attractive.", "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": "Decision Maker by Jonathan Chow is a similar, free Android app, although it\u2019s not as attractive."} +{"question": "The Decision Maker app works on which operating systems?", "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": "Android", "sentence": "Decision Maker by Jonathan Chow is a similar, free Android app, although it\u2019s not as attractive.", "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": "Decision Maker by Jonathan Chow is a similar, free Android app, although it\u2019s not as attractive."} +{"question": "Who did the police open fire on when they tried to set fire to a government building?", "paragraph": "The police opened fire after ethnic Madhesi protesters tried to set fire to government buildings, said Dipak Kaphle, a top functionary in the district of Mahottari, southeast of Kathmandu. A police official, Saurav Rana, said three of the deaths occurred in the town of Jaleswor after thousands of protesters with sticks and stones attacked officers, according to news agency reports. Since Aug. 10, 34 people have died in protests, including 10 police officials and a 2-year-old child, according to Nepal\u2019s Ministry of Home Affairs. The Madhesis oppose the way provinces are being demarcated in the draft constitution and hope for new boundaries that will allow them to form majorities in two provinces. Another ethnic group, the Tharus, are pushing for their own province. Schools, markets and workplaces have been closed for nearly a month amid a general strike in much of the region. The country\u2019s three major parties and Prime Minister Sushil Koirala have vowed to proceed with drafting the new constitution.", "answer": "after thousands of protesters with sticks and stones attacked officers,", "sentence": "A police official, Saurav Rana, said three of the deaths occurred in the town of Jaleswor after thousands of protesters with sticks and stones attacked officers, according to news agency reports.", "paragraph_sentence": "The police opened fire after ethnic Madhesi protesters tried to set fire to government buildings, said Dipak Kaphle, a top functionary in the district of Mahottari, southeast of Kathmandu. A police official, Saurav Rana, said three of the deaths occurred in the town of Jaleswor after thousands of protesters with sticks and stones attacked officers, according to news agency reports. Since Aug. 10, 34 people have died in protests, including 10 police officials and a 2-year-old child, according to Nepal\u2019s Ministry of Home Affairs. The Madhesis oppose the way provinces are being demarcated in the draft constitution and hope for new boundaries that will allow them to form majorities in two provinces. Another ethnic group, the Tharus, are pushing for their own province. Schools, markets and workplaces have been closed for nearly a month amid a general strike in much of the region. The country\u2019s three major parties and Prime Minister Sushil Koirala have vowed to proceed with drafting the new constitution.", "paragraph_answer": "The police opened fire after ethnic Madhesi protesters tried to set fire to government buildings, said Dipak Kaphle, a top functionary in the district of Mahottari, southeast of Kathmandu. A police official, Saurav Rana, said three of the deaths occurred in the town of Jaleswor after thousands of protesters with sticks and stones attacked officers, according to news agency reports. Since Aug. 10, 34 people have died in protests, including 10 police officials and a 2-year-old child, according to Nepal\u2019s Ministry of Home Affairs. The Madhesis oppose the way provinces are being demarcated in the draft constitution and hope for new boundaries that will allow them to form majorities in two provinces. Another ethnic group, the Tharus, are pushing for their own province. Schools, markets and workplaces have been closed for nearly a month amid a general strike in much of the region. The country\u2019s three major parties and Prime Minister Sushil Koirala have vowed to proceed with drafting the new constitution.", "sentence_answer": "A police official, Saurav Rana, said three of the deaths occurred in the town of Jaleswor after thousands of protesters with sticks and stones attacked officers, according to news agency reports."} +{"question": "How many deaths occurred after protesters attacked officers in Jaleswor?", "paragraph": "The police opened fire after ethnic Madhesi protesters tried to set fire to government buildings, said Dipak Kaphle, a top functionary in the district of Mahottari, southeast of Kathmandu. A police official, Saurav Rana, said three of the deaths occurred in the town of Jaleswor after thousands of protesters with sticks and stones attacked officers, according to news agency reports. Since Aug. 10, 34 people have died in protests, including 10 police officials and a 2-year-old child, according to Nepal\u2019s Ministry of Home Affairs. The Madhesis oppose the way provinces are being demarcated in the draft constitution and hope for new boundaries that will allow them to form majorities in two provinces. Another ethnic group, the Tharus, are pushing for their own province. Schools, markets and workplaces have been closed for nearly a month amid a general strike in much of the region. The country\u2019s three major parties and Prime Minister Sushil Koirala have vowed to proceed with drafting the new constitution.", "answer": "three", "sentence": "A police official, Saurav Rana, said three of the deaths occurred in the town of Jaleswor after thousands of protesters with sticks and stones attacked officers, according to news agency reports.", "paragraph_sentence": "The police opened fire after ethnic Madhesi protesters tried to set fire to government buildings, said Dipak Kaphle, a top functionary in the district of Mahottari, southeast of Kathmandu. A police official, Saurav Rana, said three of the deaths occurred in the town of Jaleswor after thousands of protesters with sticks and stones attacked officers, according to news agency reports. Since Aug. 10, 34 people have died in protests, including 10 police officials and a 2-year-old child, according to Nepal\u2019s Ministry of Home Affairs. The Madhesis oppose the way provinces are being demarcated in the draft constitution and hope for new boundaries that will allow them to form majorities in two provinces. Another ethnic group, the Tharus, are pushing for their own province. Schools, markets and workplaces have been closed for nearly a month amid a general strike in much of the region. The country\u2019s three major parties and Prime Minister Sushil Koirala have vowed to proceed with drafting the new constitution.", "paragraph_answer": "The police opened fire after ethnic Madhesi protesters tried to set fire to government buildings, said Dipak Kaphle, a top functionary in the district of Mahottari, southeast of Kathmandu. A police official, Saurav Rana, said three of the deaths occurred in the town of Jaleswor after thousands of protesters with sticks and stones attacked officers, according to news agency reports. Since Aug. 10, 34 people have died in protests, including 10 police officials and a 2-year-old child, according to Nepal\u2019s Ministry of Home Affairs. The Madhesis oppose the way provinces are being demarcated in the draft constitution and hope for new boundaries that will allow them to form majorities in two provinces. Another ethnic group, the Tharus, are pushing for their own province. Schools, markets and workplaces have been closed for nearly a month amid a general strike in much of the region. The country\u2019s three major parties and Prime Minister Sushil Koirala have vowed to proceed with drafting the new constitution.", "sentence_answer": "A police official, Saurav Rana, said three of the deaths occurred in the town of Jaleswor after thousands of protesters with sticks and stones attacked officers, according to news agency reports."} +{"question": "How many fatalities were of police officials?", "paragraph": "The police opened fire after ethnic Madhesi protesters tried to set fire to government buildings, said Dipak Kaphle, a top functionary in the district of Mahottari, southeast of Kathmandu. A police official, Saurav Rana, said three of the deaths occurred in the town of Jaleswor after thousands of protesters with sticks and stones attacked officers, according to news agency reports. Since Aug. 10, 34 people have died in protests, including 10 police officials and a 2-year-old child, according to Nepal\u2019s Ministry of Home Affairs. The Madhesis oppose the way provinces are being demarcated in the draft constitution and hope for new boundaries that will allow them to form majorities in two provinces. Another ethnic group, the Tharus, are pushing for their own province. Schools, markets and workplaces have been closed for nearly a month amid a general strike in much of the region. The country\u2019s three major parties and Prime Minister Sushil Koirala have vowed to proceed with drafting the new constitution.", "answer": "10 police officials", "sentence": "Since Aug. 10, 34 people have died in protests, including 10 police officials and a 2-year-old child, according to Nepal\u2019s Ministry of Home Affairs.", "paragraph_sentence": "The police opened fire after ethnic Madhesi protesters tried to set fire to government buildings, said Dipak Kaphle, a top functionary in the district of Mahottari, southeast of Kathmandu. A police official, Saurav Rana, said three of the deaths occurred in the town of Jaleswor after thousands of protesters with sticks and stones attacked officers, according to news agency reports. Since Aug. 10, 34 people have died in protests, including 10 police officials and a 2-year-old child, according to Nepal\u2019s Ministry of Home Affairs. The Madhesis oppose the way provinces are being demarcated in the draft constitution and hope for new boundaries that will allow them to form majorities in two provinces. Another ethnic group, the Tharus, are pushing for their own province. Schools, markets and workplaces have been closed for nearly a month amid a general strike in much of the region. The country\u2019s three major parties and Prime Minister Sushil Koirala have vowed to proceed with drafting the new constitution.", "paragraph_answer": "The police opened fire after ethnic Madhesi protesters tried to set fire to government buildings, said Dipak Kaphle, a top functionary in the district of Mahottari, southeast of Kathmandu. A police official, Saurav Rana, said three of the deaths occurred in the town of Jaleswor after thousands of protesters with sticks and stones attacked officers, according to news agency reports. Since Aug. 10, 34 people have died in protests, including 10 police officials and a 2-year-old child, according to Nepal\u2019s Ministry of Home Affairs. The Madhesis oppose the way provinces are being demarcated in the draft constitution and hope for new boundaries that will allow them to form majorities in two provinces. Another ethnic group, the Tharus, are pushing for their own province. Schools, markets and workplaces have been closed for nearly a month amid a general strike in much of the region. The country\u2019s three major parties and Prime Minister Sushil Koirala have vowed to proceed with drafting the new constitution.", "sentence_answer": "Since Aug. 10, 34 people have died in protests, including 10 police officials and a 2-year-old child, according to Nepal\u2019s Ministry of Home Affairs."} +{"question": "Who is it that is opposing the way provinces are being demacrated in the draft constitution?", "paragraph": "The police opened fire after ethnic Madhesi protesters tried to set fire to government buildings, said Dipak Kaphle, a top functionary in the district of Mahottari, southeast of Kathmandu. A police official, Saurav Rana, said three of the deaths occurred in the town of Jaleswor after thousands of protesters with sticks and stones attacked officers, according to news agency reports. Since Aug. 10, 34 people have died in protests, including 10 police officials and a 2-year-old child, according to Nepal\u2019s Ministry of Home Affairs. The Madhesis oppose the way provinces are being demarcated in the draft constitution and hope for new boundaries that will allow them to form majorities in two provinces. Another ethnic group, the Tharus, are pushing for their own province. Schools, markets and workplaces have been closed for nearly a month amid a general strike in much of the region. The country\u2019s three major parties and Prime Minister Sushil Koirala have vowed to proceed with drafting the new constitution.", "answer": "The Madhesis", "sentence": "The Madhesis oppose the way provinces are being demarcated in the draft constitution and hope for new boundaries that will allow them to form majorities in two provinces.", "paragraph_sentence": "The police opened fire after ethnic Madhesi protesters tried to set fire to government buildings, said Dipak Kaphle, a top functionary in the district of Mahottari, southeast of Kathmandu. A police official, Saurav Rana, said three of the deaths occurred in the town of Jaleswor after thousands of protesters with sticks and stones attacked officers, according to news agency reports. Since Aug. 10, 34 people have died in protests, including 10 police officials and a 2-year-old child, according to Nepal\u2019s Ministry of Home Affairs. The Madhesis oppose the way provinces are being demarcated in the draft constitution and hope for new boundaries that will allow them to form majorities in two provinces. Another ethnic group, the Tharus, are pushing for their own province. Schools, markets and workplaces have been closed for nearly a month amid a general strike in much of the region. The country\u2019s three major parties and Prime Minister Sushil Koirala have vowed to proceed with drafting the new constitution.", "paragraph_answer": "The police opened fire after ethnic Madhesi protesters tried to set fire to government buildings, said Dipak Kaphle, a top functionary in the district of Mahottari, southeast of Kathmandu. A police official, Saurav Rana, said three of the deaths occurred in the town of Jaleswor after thousands of protesters with sticks and stones attacked officers, according to news agency reports. Since Aug. 10, 34 people have died in protests, including 10 police officials and a 2-year-old child, according to Nepal\u2019s Ministry of Home Affairs. The Madhesis oppose the way provinces are being demarcated in the draft constitution and hope for new boundaries that will allow them to form majorities in two provinces. Another ethnic group, the Tharus, are pushing for their own province. Schools, markets and workplaces have been closed for nearly a month amid a general strike in much of the region. The country\u2019s three major parties and Prime Minister Sushil Koirala have vowed to proceed with drafting the new constitution.", "sentence_answer": " The Madhesis oppose the way provinces are being demarcated in the draft constitution and hope for new boundaries that will allow them to form majorities in two provinces."} +{"question": "What is another ethnic group pushing for their own province?", "paragraph": "The police opened fire after ethnic Madhesi protesters tried to set fire to government buildings, said Dipak Kaphle, a top functionary in the district of Mahottari, southeast of Kathmandu. A police official, Saurav Rana, said three of the deaths occurred in the town of Jaleswor after thousands of protesters with sticks and stones attacked officers, according to news agency reports. Since Aug. 10, 34 people have died in protests, including 10 police officials and a 2-year-old child, according to Nepal\u2019s Ministry of Home Affairs. The Madhesis oppose the way provinces are being demarcated in the draft constitution and hope for new boundaries that will allow them to form majorities in two provinces. Another ethnic group, the Tharus, are pushing for their own province. Schools, markets and workplaces have been closed for nearly a month amid a general strike in much of the region. The country\u2019s three major parties and Prime Minister Sushil Koirala have vowed to proceed with drafting the new constitution.", "answer": "Tharus", "sentence": "Another ethnic group, the Tharus , are pushing for their own province.", "paragraph_sentence": "The police opened fire after ethnic Madhesi protesters tried to set fire to government buildings, said Dipak Kaphle, a top functionary in the district of Mahottari, southeast of Kathmandu. A police official, Saurav Rana, said three of the deaths occurred in the town of Jaleswor after thousands of protesters with sticks and stones attacked officers, according to news agency reports. Since Aug. 10, 34 people have died in protests, including 10 police officials and a 2-year-old child, according to Nepal\u2019s Ministry of Home Affairs. The Madhesis oppose the way provinces are being demarcated in the draft constitution and hope for new boundaries that will allow them to form majorities in two provinces. Another ethnic group, the Tharus , are pushing for their own province. Schools, markets and workplaces have been closed for nearly a month amid a general strike in much of the region. The country\u2019s three major parties and Prime Minister Sushil Koirala have vowed to proceed with drafting the new constitution.", "paragraph_answer": "The police opened fire after ethnic Madhesi protesters tried to set fire to government buildings, said Dipak Kaphle, a top functionary in the district of Mahottari, southeast of Kathmandu. A police official, Saurav Rana, said three of the deaths occurred in the town of Jaleswor after thousands of protesters with sticks and stones attacked officers, according to news agency reports. Since Aug. 10, 34 people have died in protests, including 10 police officials and a 2-year-old child, according to Nepal\u2019s Ministry of Home Affairs. The Madhesis oppose the way provinces are being demarcated in the draft constitution and hope for new boundaries that will allow them to form majorities in two provinces. Another ethnic group, the Tharus , are pushing for their own province. Schools, markets and workplaces have been closed for nearly a month amid a general strike in much of the region. The country\u2019s three major parties and Prime Minister Sushil Koirala have vowed to proceed with drafting the new constitution.", "sentence_answer": "Another ethnic group, the Tharus , are pushing for their own province."} +{"question": "What was the body of the 300 SLR made of?", "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": "Elektron", "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 ."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What won the event in 1952?", "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": "Mercedes-Benz", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "What compensated for the conventional drum brakes", "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": "air brake", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "What was exciting to watch?", "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": "The new Mercedes", "sentence": "The new Mercedes were exciting to watch.", "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 new Mercedes were exciting to watch."} +{"question": "How many meters was the track?", "paragraph": "But if that all sounds familiar to contemporary racing enthusiasts, there were other aspects of that mid-20th-century race that were quite different. The track was only about 10 meters, or 35 feet, across; the pits on the main straight were part of the track itself, not separated by a pitlane; and, facing the pits, the spectators sat on benches and bleachers, and some even made their own viewing perches, standing on trestle tables they had set up trackside. It was a hodgepodge, a ragged mass of humanity grouped along and over the edge of the track, with only bales of straw and a mound of earth separating them from the racing cars traveling at top speeds of 300 kilometers, or 185 miles, an hour. Given those conditions, a disaster could have been in the making on that June day should anything go wrong.", "answer": "about 10", "sentence": "The track was only about 10 meters, or 35 feet, across; the pits on the main straight were part of the track itself, not separated by a pitlane; and, facing the pits, the spectators sat on benches and bleachers, and some even made their own viewing perches, standing on trestle tables they had set up trackside.", "paragraph_sentence": "But if that all sounds familiar to contemporary racing enthusiasts, there were other aspects of that mid-20th-century race that were quite different. The track was only about 10 meters, or 35 feet, across; the pits on the main straight were part of the track itself, not separated by a pitlane; and, facing the pits, the spectators sat on benches and bleachers, and some even made their own viewing perches, standing on trestle tables they had set up trackside. It was a hodgepodge, a ragged mass of humanity grouped along and over the edge of the track, with only bales of straw and a mound of earth separating them from the racing cars traveling at top speeds of 300 kilometers, or 185 miles, an hour. Given those conditions, a disaster could have been in the making on that June day should anything go wrong.", "paragraph_answer": "But if that all sounds familiar to contemporary racing enthusiasts, there were other aspects of that mid-20th-century race that were quite different. The track was only about 10 meters, or 35 feet, across; the pits on the main straight were part of the track itself, not separated by a pitlane; and, facing the pits, the spectators sat on benches and bleachers, and some even made their own viewing perches, standing on trestle tables they had set up trackside. It was a hodgepodge, a ragged mass of humanity grouped along and over the edge of the track, with only bales of straw and a mound of earth separating them from the racing cars traveling at top speeds of 300 kilometers, or 185 miles, an hour. Given those conditions, a disaster could have been in the making on that June day should anything go wrong.", "sentence_answer": "The track was only about 10 meters, or 35 feet, across; the pits on the main straight were part of the track itself, not separated by a pitlane; and, facing the pits, the spectators sat on benches and bleachers, and some even made their own viewing perches, standing on trestle tables they had set up trackside."} +{"question": "What did the spectators sit on?", "paragraph": "But if that all sounds familiar to contemporary racing enthusiasts, there were other aspects of that mid-20th-century race that were quite different. The track was only about 10 meters, or 35 feet, across; the pits on the main straight were part of the track itself, not separated by a pitlane; and, facing the pits, the spectators sat on benches and bleachers, and some even made their own viewing perches, standing on trestle tables they had set up trackside. It was a hodgepodge, a ragged mass of humanity grouped along and over the edge of the track, with only bales of straw and a mound of earth separating them from the racing cars traveling at top speeds of 300 kilometers, or 185 miles, an hour. Given those conditions, a disaster could have been in the making on that June day should anything go wrong.", "answer": "benches and bleachers", "sentence": "The track was only about 10 meters, or 35 feet, across; the pits on the main straight were part of the track itself, not separated by a pitlane; and, facing the pits, the spectators sat on benches and bleachers , and some even made their own viewing perches, standing on trestle tables they had set up trackside.", "paragraph_sentence": "But if that all sounds familiar to contemporary racing enthusiasts, there were other aspects of that mid-20th-century race that were quite different. The track was only about 10 meters, or 35 feet, across; the pits on the main straight were part of the track itself, not separated by a pitlane; and, facing the pits, the spectators sat on benches and bleachers , and some even made their own viewing perches, standing on trestle tables they had set up trackside. It was a hodgepodge, a ragged mass of humanity grouped along and over the edge of the track, with only bales of straw and a mound of earth separating them from the racing cars traveling at top speeds of 300 kilometers, or 185 miles, an hour. Given those conditions, a disaster could have been in the making on that June day should anything go wrong.", "paragraph_answer": "But if that all sounds familiar to contemporary racing enthusiasts, there were other aspects of that mid-20th-century race that were quite different. The track was only about 10 meters, or 35 feet, across; the pits on the main straight were part of the track itself, not separated by a pitlane; and, facing the pits, the spectators sat on benches and bleachers , and some even made their own viewing perches, standing on trestle tables they had set up trackside. It was a hodgepodge, a ragged mass of humanity grouped along and over the edge of the track, with only bales of straw and a mound of earth separating them from the racing cars traveling at top speeds of 300 kilometers, or 185 miles, an hour. Given those conditions, a disaster could have been in the making on that June day should anything go wrong.", "sentence_answer": "The track was only about 10 meters, or 35 feet, across; the pits on the main straight were part of the track itself, not separated by a pitlane; and, facing the pits, the spectators sat on benches and bleachers , and some even made their own viewing perches, standing on trestle tables they had set up trackside."} +{"question": "How many miles per hour were the top speeds?", "paragraph": "But if that all sounds familiar to contemporary racing enthusiasts, there were other aspects of that mid-20th-century race that were quite different. The track was only about 10 meters, or 35 feet, across; the pits on the main straight were part of the track itself, not separated by a pitlane; and, facing the pits, the spectators sat on benches and bleachers, and some even made their own viewing perches, standing on trestle tables they had set up trackside. It was a hodgepodge, a ragged mass of humanity grouped along and over the edge of the track, with only bales of straw and a mound of earth separating them from the racing cars traveling at top speeds of 300 kilometers, or 185 miles, an hour. Given those conditions, a disaster could have been in the making on that June day should anything go wrong.", "answer": "185", "sentence": "It was a hodgepodge, a ragged mass of humanity grouped along and over the edge of the track, with only bales of straw and a mound of earth separating them from the racing cars traveling at top speeds of 300 kilometers, or 185 miles, an hour.", "paragraph_sentence": "But if that all sounds familiar to contemporary racing enthusiasts, there were other aspects of that mid-20th-century race that were quite different. The track was only about 10 meters, or 35 feet, across; the pits on the main straight were part of the track itself, not separated by a pitlane; and, facing the pits, the spectators sat on benches and bleachers, and some even made their own viewing perches, standing on trestle tables they had set up trackside. It was a hodgepodge, a ragged mass of humanity grouped along and over the edge of the track, with only bales of straw and a mound of earth separating them from the racing cars traveling at top speeds of 300 kilometers, or 185 miles, an hour. Given those conditions, a disaster could have been in the making on that June day should anything go wrong.", "paragraph_answer": "But if that all sounds familiar to contemporary racing enthusiasts, there were other aspects of that mid-20th-century race that were quite different. The track was only about 10 meters, or 35 feet, across; the pits on the main straight were part of the track itself, not separated by a pitlane; and, facing the pits, the spectators sat on benches and bleachers, and some even made their own viewing perches, standing on trestle tables they had set up trackside. It was a hodgepodge, a ragged mass of humanity grouped along and over the edge of the track, with only bales of straw and a mound of earth separating them from the racing cars traveling at top speeds of 300 kilometers, or 185 miles, an hour. Given those conditions, a disaster could have been in the making on that June day should anything go wrong.", "sentence_answer": "It was a hodgepodge, a ragged mass of humanity grouped along and over the edge of the track, with only bales of straw and a mound of earth separating them from the racing cars traveling at top speeds of 300 kilometers, or 185 miles, an hour."} +{"question": "What month did this take place?", "paragraph": "But if that all sounds familiar to contemporary racing enthusiasts, there were other aspects of that mid-20th-century race that were quite different. The track was only about 10 meters, or 35 feet, across; the pits on the main straight were part of the track itself, not separated by a pitlane; and, facing the pits, the spectators sat on benches and bleachers, and some even made their own viewing perches, standing on trestle tables they had set up trackside. It was a hodgepodge, a ragged mass of humanity grouped along and over the edge of the track, with only bales of straw and a mound of earth separating them from the racing cars traveling at top speeds of 300 kilometers, or 185 miles, an hour. Given those conditions, a disaster could have been in the making on that June day should anything go wrong.", "answer": "June", "sentence": "Given those conditions, a disaster could have been in the making on that June day should anything go wrong.", "paragraph_sentence": "But if that all sounds familiar to contemporary racing enthusiasts, there were other aspects of that mid-20th-century race that were quite different. The track was only about 10 meters, or 35 feet, across; the pits on the main straight were part of the track itself, not separated by a pitlane; and, facing the pits, the spectators sat on benches and bleachers, and some even made their own viewing perches, standing on trestle tables they had set up trackside. It was a hodgepodge, a ragged mass of humanity grouped along and over the edge of the track, with only bales of straw and a mound of earth separating them from the racing cars traveling at top speeds of 300 kilometers, or 185 miles, an hour. Given those conditions, a disaster could have been in the making on that June day should anything go wrong. ", "paragraph_answer": "But if that all sounds familiar to contemporary racing enthusiasts, there were other aspects of that mid-20th-century race that were quite different. The track was only about 10 meters, or 35 feet, across; the pits on the main straight were part of the track itself, not separated by a pitlane; and, facing the pits, the spectators sat on benches and bleachers, and some even made their own viewing perches, standing on trestle tables they had set up trackside. It was a hodgepodge, a ragged mass of humanity grouped along and over the edge of the track, with only bales of straw and a mound of earth separating them from the racing cars traveling at top speeds of 300 kilometers, or 185 miles, an hour. Given those conditions, a disaster could have been in the making on that June day should anything go wrong.", "sentence_answer": "Given those conditions, a disaster could have been in the making on that June day should anything go wrong."} +{"question": "What make of car was rapidly decelerating?", "paragraph": "This took Macklin by surprise. He braked with his own less powerful drum brakes and swerved to the left to avoid the rapidly decelerating Jaguar. Meanwhile, Fangio, who was in second position, about 200 meters behind Hawthorn, was coming up to pass the Mercedes of Levegh. Levegh, though, was surprised by Macklin\u2019s Austin-Healey swerving across the track. He could not slow in time. So while racing at 240 kilometers an hour, with Fangio right behind him, Levegh\u2019s Mercedes made contact with the left rear of Macklin\u2019s car and was catapulted into the air. It crashed on the embankment on the spectator side of the track and exploded in a ball of flames from the fuel. Levegh, 49, was thrown from the car and killed instantly. His car broke into several pieces. Both the engine and the rear hood, with the air brake, were ripped out of the car and plowed a furrow through the crowd. Worse, the hood spun around like a disc through the packed group of spectators, decapitating dozens of people. Many other spectators were killed by the explosion. The initial flames caused by the burning fuel raised the heat level of the chassis, causing the magnesium to explode in white-hot flames, sending embers into the crowd.", "answer": "Jaguar", "sentence": "He braked with his own less powerful drum brakes and swerved to the left to avoid the rapidly decelerating Jaguar .", "paragraph_sentence": "This took Macklin by surprise. He braked with his own less powerful drum brakes and swerved to the left to avoid the rapidly decelerating Jaguar . Meanwhile, Fangio, who was in second position, about 200 meters behind Hawthorn, was coming up to pass the Mercedes of Levegh. Levegh, though, was surprised by Macklin\u2019s Austin-Healey swerving across the track. He could not slow in time. So while racing at 240 kilometers an hour, with Fangio right behind him, Levegh\u2019s Mercedes made contact with the left rear of Macklin\u2019s car and was catapulted into the air. It crashed on the embankment on the spectator side of the track and exploded in a ball of flames from the fuel. Levegh, 49, was thrown from the car and killed instantly. His car broke into several pieces. Both the engine and the rear hood, with the air brake, were ripped out of the car and plowed a furrow through the crowd. Worse, the hood spun around like a disc through the packed group of spectators, decapitating dozens of people. Many other spectators were killed by the explosion. The initial flames caused by the burning fuel raised the heat level of the chassis, causing the magnesium to explode in white-hot flames, sending embers into the crowd.", "paragraph_answer": "This took Macklin by surprise. He braked with his own less powerful drum brakes and swerved to the left to avoid the rapidly decelerating Jaguar . Meanwhile, Fangio, who was in second position, about 200 meters behind Hawthorn, was coming up to pass the Mercedes of Levegh. Levegh, though, was surprised by Macklin\u2019s Austin-Healey swerving across the track. He could not slow in time. So while racing at 240 kilometers an hour, with Fangio right behind him, Levegh\u2019s Mercedes made contact with the left rear of Macklin\u2019s car and was catapulted into the air. It crashed on the embankment on the spectator side of the track and exploded in a ball of flames from the fuel. Levegh, 49, was thrown from the car and killed instantly. His car broke into several pieces. Both the engine and the rear hood, with the air brake, were ripped out of the car and plowed a furrow through the crowd. Worse, the hood spun around like a disc through the packed group of spectators, decapitating dozens of people. Many other spectators were killed by the explosion. The initial flames caused by the burning fuel raised the heat level of the chassis, causing the magnesium to explode in white-hot flames, sending embers into the crowd.", "sentence_answer": "He braked with his own less powerful drum brakes and swerved to the left to avoid the rapidly decelerating Jaguar ."} +{"question": "What killed many of the spectators?", "paragraph": "This took Macklin by surprise. He braked with his own less powerful drum brakes and swerved to the left to avoid the rapidly decelerating Jaguar. Meanwhile, Fangio, who was in second position, about 200 meters behind Hawthorn, was coming up to pass the Mercedes of Levegh. Levegh, though, was surprised by Macklin\u2019s Austin-Healey swerving across the track. He could not slow in time. So while racing at 240 kilometers an hour, with Fangio right behind him, Levegh\u2019s Mercedes made contact with the left rear of Macklin\u2019s car and was catapulted into the air. It crashed on the embankment on the spectator side of the track and exploded in a ball of flames from the fuel. Levegh, 49, was thrown from the car and killed instantly. His car broke into several pieces. Both the engine and the rear hood, with the air brake, were ripped out of the car and plowed a furrow through the crowd. Worse, the hood spun around like a disc through the packed group of spectators, decapitating dozens of people. Many other spectators were killed by the explosion. The initial flames caused by the burning fuel raised the heat level of the chassis, causing the magnesium to explode in white-hot flames, sending embers into the crowd.", "answer": "explosion", "sentence": "Many other spectators were killed by the explosion .", "paragraph_sentence": "This took Macklin by surprise. He braked with his own less powerful drum brakes and swerved to the left to avoid the rapidly decelerating Jaguar. Meanwhile, Fangio, who was in second position, about 200 meters behind Hawthorn, was coming up to pass the Mercedes of Levegh. Levegh, though, was surprised by Macklin\u2019s Austin-Healey swerving across the track. He could not slow in time. So while racing at 240 kilometers an hour, with Fangio right behind him, Levegh\u2019s Mercedes made contact with the left rear of Macklin\u2019s car and was catapulted into the air. It crashed on the embankment on the spectator side of the track and exploded in a ball of flames from the fuel. Levegh, 49, was thrown from the car and killed instantly. His car broke into several pieces. Both the engine and the rear hood, with the air brake, were ripped out of the car and plowed a furrow through the crowd. Worse, the hood spun around like a disc through the packed group of spectators, decapitating dozens of people. Many other spectators were killed by the explosion . The initial flames caused by the burning fuel raised the heat level of the chassis, causing the magnesium to explode in white-hot flames, sending embers into the crowd.", "paragraph_answer": "This took Macklin by surprise. He braked with his own less powerful drum brakes and swerved to the left to avoid the rapidly decelerating Jaguar. Meanwhile, Fangio, who was in second position, about 200 meters behind Hawthorn, was coming up to pass the Mercedes of Levegh. Levegh, though, was surprised by Macklin\u2019s Austin-Healey swerving across the track. He could not slow in time. So while racing at 240 kilometers an hour, with Fangio right behind him, Levegh\u2019s Mercedes made contact with the left rear of Macklin\u2019s car and was catapulted into the air. It crashed on the embankment on the spectator side of the track and exploded in a ball of flames from the fuel. Levegh, 49, was thrown from the car and killed instantly. His car broke into several pieces. Both the engine and the rear hood, with the air brake, were ripped out of the car and plowed a furrow through the crowd. Worse, the hood spun around like a disc through the packed group of spectators, decapitating dozens of people. Many other spectators were killed by the explosion . The initial flames caused by the burning fuel raised the heat level of the chassis, causing the magnesium to explode in white-hot flames, sending embers into the crowd.", "sentence_answer": "Many other spectators were killed by the explosion ."} +{"question": "What exploded into white hot flames?", "paragraph": "This took Macklin by surprise. He braked with his own less powerful drum brakes and swerved to the left to avoid the rapidly decelerating Jaguar. Meanwhile, Fangio, who was in second position, about 200 meters behind Hawthorn, was coming up to pass the Mercedes of Levegh. Levegh, though, was surprised by Macklin\u2019s Austin-Healey swerving across the track. He could not slow in time. So while racing at 240 kilometers an hour, with Fangio right behind him, Levegh\u2019s Mercedes made contact with the left rear of Macklin\u2019s car and was catapulted into the air. It crashed on the embankment on the spectator side of the track and exploded in a ball of flames from the fuel. Levegh, 49, was thrown from the car and killed instantly. His car broke into several pieces. Both the engine and the rear hood, with the air brake, were ripped out of the car and plowed a furrow through the crowd. Worse, the hood spun around like a disc through the packed group of spectators, decapitating dozens of people. Many other spectators were killed by the explosion. The initial flames caused by the burning fuel raised the heat level of the chassis, causing the magnesium to explode in white-hot flames, sending embers into the crowd.", "answer": "magnesium", "sentence": "The initial flames caused by the burning fuel raised the heat level of the chassis, causing the magnesium to explode in white-hot flames, sending embers into the crowd.", "paragraph_sentence": "This took Macklin by surprise. He braked with his own less powerful drum brakes and swerved to the left to avoid the rapidly decelerating Jaguar. Meanwhile, Fangio, who was in second position, about 200 meters behind Hawthorn, was coming up to pass the Mercedes of Levegh. Levegh, though, was surprised by Macklin\u2019s Austin-Healey swerving across the track. He could not slow in time. So while racing at 240 kilometers an hour, with Fangio right behind him, Levegh\u2019s Mercedes made contact with the left rear of Macklin\u2019s car and was catapulted into the air. It crashed on the embankment on the spectator side of the track and exploded in a ball of flames from the fuel. Levegh, 49, was thrown from the car and killed instantly. His car broke into several pieces. Both the engine and the rear hood, with the air brake, were ripped out of the car and plowed a furrow through the crowd. Worse, the hood spun around like a disc through the packed group of spectators, decapitating dozens of people. Many other spectators were killed by the explosion. The initial flames caused by the burning fuel raised the heat level of the chassis, causing the magnesium to explode in white-hot flames, sending embers into the crowd. ", "paragraph_answer": "This took Macklin by surprise. He braked with his own less powerful drum brakes and swerved to the left to avoid the rapidly decelerating Jaguar. Meanwhile, Fangio, who was in second position, about 200 meters behind Hawthorn, was coming up to pass the Mercedes of Levegh. Levegh, though, was surprised by Macklin\u2019s Austin-Healey swerving across the track. He could not slow in time. So while racing at 240 kilometers an hour, with Fangio right behind him, Levegh\u2019s Mercedes made contact with the left rear of Macklin\u2019s car and was catapulted into the air. It crashed on the embankment on the spectator side of the track and exploded in a ball of flames from the fuel. Levegh, 49, was thrown from the car and killed instantly. His car broke into several pieces. Both the engine and the rear hood, with the air brake, were ripped out of the car and plowed a furrow through the crowd. Worse, the hood spun around like a disc through the packed group of spectators, decapitating dozens of people. Many other spectators were killed by the explosion. The initial flames caused by the burning fuel raised the heat level of the chassis, causing the magnesium to explode in white-hot flames, sending embers into the crowd.", "sentence_answer": "The initial flames caused by the burning fuel raised the heat level of the chassis, causing the magnesium to explode in white-hot flames, sending embers into the crowd."} +{"question": "How old was Levegh when he was killed?", "paragraph": "This took Macklin by surprise. He braked with his own less powerful drum brakes and swerved to the left to avoid the rapidly decelerating Jaguar. Meanwhile, Fangio, who was in second position, about 200 meters behind Hawthorn, was coming up to pass the Mercedes of Levegh. Levegh, though, was surprised by Macklin\u2019s Austin-Healey swerving across the track. He could not slow in time. So while racing at 240 kilometers an hour, with Fangio right behind him, Levegh\u2019s Mercedes made contact with the left rear of Macklin\u2019s car and was catapulted into the air. It crashed on the embankment on the spectator side of the track and exploded in a ball of flames from the fuel. Levegh, 49, was thrown from the car and killed instantly. His car broke into several pieces. Both the engine and the rear hood, with the air brake, were ripped out of the car and plowed a furrow through the crowd. Worse, the hood spun around like a disc through the packed group of spectators, decapitating dozens of people. Many other spectators were killed by the explosion. The initial flames caused by the burning fuel raised the heat level of the chassis, causing the magnesium to explode in white-hot flames, sending embers into the crowd.", "answer": "49", "sentence": "Levegh, 49 , was thrown from the car and killed instantly.", "paragraph_sentence": "This took Macklin by surprise. He braked with his own less powerful drum brakes and swerved to the left to avoid the rapidly decelerating Jaguar. Meanwhile, Fangio, who was in second position, about 200 meters behind Hawthorn, was coming up to pass the Mercedes of Levegh. Levegh, though, was surprised by Macklin\u2019s Austin-Healey swerving across the track. He could not slow in time. So while racing at 240 kilometers an hour, with Fangio right behind him, Levegh\u2019s Mercedes made contact with the left rear of Macklin\u2019s car and was catapulted into the air. It crashed on the embankment on the spectator side of the track and exploded in a ball of flames from the fuel. Levegh, 49 , was thrown from the car and killed instantly. His car broke into several pieces. Both the engine and the rear hood, with the air brake, were ripped out of the car and plowed a furrow through the crowd. Worse, the hood spun around like a disc through the packed group of spectators, decapitating dozens of people. Many other spectators were killed by the explosion. The initial flames caused by the burning fuel raised the heat level of the chassis, causing the magnesium to explode in white-hot flames, sending embers into the crowd.", "paragraph_answer": "This took Macklin by surprise. He braked with his own less powerful drum brakes and swerved to the left to avoid the rapidly decelerating Jaguar. Meanwhile, Fangio, who was in second position, about 200 meters behind Hawthorn, was coming up to pass the Mercedes of Levegh. Levegh, though, was surprised by Macklin\u2019s Austin-Healey swerving across the track. He could not slow in time. So while racing at 240 kilometers an hour, with Fangio right behind him, Levegh\u2019s Mercedes made contact with the left rear of Macklin\u2019s car and was catapulted into the air. It crashed on the embankment on the spectator side of the track and exploded in a ball of flames from the fuel. Levegh, 49 , was thrown from the car and killed instantly. His car broke into several pieces. Both the engine and the rear hood, with the air brake, were ripped out of the car and plowed a furrow through the crowd. Worse, the hood spun around like a disc through the packed group of spectators, decapitating dozens of people. Many other spectators were killed by the explosion. The initial flames caused by the burning fuel raised the heat level of the chassis, causing the magnesium to explode in white-hot flames, sending embers into the crowd.", "sentence_answer": "Levegh, 49 , was thrown from the car and killed instantly."} +{"question": "How fast was Levegh driving when the crash occurred?", "paragraph": "This took Macklin by surprise. He braked with his own less powerful drum brakes and swerved to the left to avoid the rapidly decelerating Jaguar. Meanwhile, Fangio, who was in second position, about 200 meters behind Hawthorn, was coming up to pass the Mercedes of Levegh. Levegh, though, was surprised by Macklin\u2019s Austin-Healey swerving across the track. He could not slow in time. So while racing at 240 kilometers an hour, with Fangio right behind him, Levegh\u2019s Mercedes made contact with the left rear of Macklin\u2019s car and was catapulted into the air. It crashed on the embankment on the spectator side of the track and exploded in a ball of flames from the fuel. Levegh, 49, was thrown from the car and killed instantly. His car broke into several pieces. Both the engine and the rear hood, with the air brake, were ripped out of the car and plowed a furrow through the crowd. Worse, the hood spun around like a disc through the packed group of spectators, decapitating dozens of people. Many other spectators were killed by the explosion. The initial flames caused by the burning fuel raised the heat level of the chassis, causing the magnesium to explode in white-hot flames, sending embers into the crowd.", "answer": "240 kilometers an hour", "sentence": "So while racing at 240 kilometers an hour , with Fangio right behind him, Levegh\u2019s Mercedes made contact with the left rear of Macklin\u2019s car and was catapulted into the air.", "paragraph_sentence": "This took Macklin by surprise. He braked with his own less powerful drum brakes and swerved to the left to avoid the rapidly decelerating Jaguar. Meanwhile, Fangio, who was in second position, about 200 meters behind Hawthorn, was coming up to pass the Mercedes of Levegh. Levegh, though, was surprised by Macklin\u2019s Austin-Healey swerving across the track. He could not slow in time. So while racing at 240 kilometers an hour , with Fangio right behind him, Levegh\u2019s Mercedes made contact with the left rear of Macklin\u2019s car and was catapulted into the air. It crashed on the embankment on the spectator side of the track and exploded in a ball of flames from the fuel. Levegh, 49, was thrown from the car and killed instantly. His car broke into several pieces. Both the engine and the rear hood, with the air brake, were ripped out of the car and plowed a furrow through the crowd. Worse, the hood spun around like a disc through the packed group of spectators, decapitating dozens of people. Many other spectators were killed by the explosion. The initial flames caused by the burning fuel raised the heat level of the chassis, causing the magnesium to explode in white-hot flames, sending embers into the crowd.", "paragraph_answer": "This took Macklin by surprise. He braked with his own less powerful drum brakes and swerved to the left to avoid the rapidly decelerating Jaguar. Meanwhile, Fangio, who was in second position, about 200 meters behind Hawthorn, was coming up to pass the Mercedes of Levegh. Levegh, though, was surprised by Macklin\u2019s Austin-Healey swerving across the track. He could not slow in time. So while racing at 240 kilometers an hour , with Fangio right behind him, Levegh\u2019s Mercedes made contact with the left rear of Macklin\u2019s car and was catapulted into the air. It crashed on the embankment on the spectator side of the track and exploded in a ball of flames from the fuel. Levegh, 49, was thrown from the car and killed instantly. His car broke into several pieces. Both the engine and the rear hood, with the air brake, were ripped out of the car and plowed a furrow through the crowd. Worse, the hood spun around like a disc through the packed group of spectators, decapitating dozens of people. Many other spectators were killed by the explosion. The initial flames caused by the burning fuel raised the heat level of the chassis, causing the magnesium to explode in white-hot flames, sending embers into the crowd.", "sentence_answer": "So while racing at 240 kilometers an hour , with Fangio right behind him, Levegh\u2019s Mercedes made contact with the left rear of Macklin\u2019s car and was catapulted into the air."} +{"question": "When did Mercedes withdraw from the race?", "paragraph": "Mercedes withdrew from the race after midnight, with Fangio leading, but the race ran to the end on Sunday, with Hawthorn winning. Several countries immediately banned auto racing, including France, Germany and Switzerland, until safety was improved for spectators. Switzerland still has a ban on circuit racing in force today.", "answer": "after midnight", "sentence": "Mercedes withdrew from the race after midnight , with Fangio leading, but the race ran to the end on Sunday, with Hawthorn winning.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mercedes withdrew from the race after midnight , with Fangio leading, but the race ran to the end on Sunday, with Hawthorn winning. Several countries immediately banned auto racing, including France, Germany and Switzerland, until safety was improved for spectators. Switzerland still has a ban on circuit racing in force today.", "paragraph_answer": "Mercedes withdrew from the race after midnight , with Fangio leading, but the race ran to the end on Sunday, with Hawthorn winning. Several countries immediately banned auto racing, including France, Germany and Switzerland, until safety was improved for spectators. Switzerland still has a ban on circuit racing in force today.", "sentence_answer": "Mercedes withdrew from the race after midnight , with Fangio leading, but the race ran to the end on Sunday, with Hawthorn winning."} +{"question": "Who win the race?", "paragraph": "Mercedes withdrew from the race after midnight, with Fangio leading, but the race ran to the end on Sunday, with Hawthorn winning. Several countries immediately banned auto racing, including France, Germany and Switzerland, until safety was improved for spectators. Switzerland still has a ban on circuit racing in force today.", "answer": "Hawthorn", "sentence": "Mercedes withdrew from the race after midnight, with Fangio leading, but the race ran to the end on Sunday, with Hawthorn winning.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mercedes withdrew from the race after midnight, with Fangio leading, but the race ran to the end on Sunday, with Hawthorn winning. Several countries immediately banned auto racing, including France, Germany and Switzerland, until safety was improved for spectators. Switzerland still has a ban on circuit racing in force today.", "paragraph_answer": "Mercedes withdrew from the race after midnight, with Fangio leading, but the race ran to the end on Sunday, with Hawthorn winning. Several countries immediately banned auto racing, including France, Germany and Switzerland, until safety was improved for spectators. Switzerland still has a ban on circuit racing in force today.", "sentence_answer": "Mercedes withdrew from the race after midnight, with Fangio leading, but the race ran to the end on Sunday, with Hawthorn winning."} +{"question": "Which country still has a ban on circuit racing?", "paragraph": "Mercedes withdrew from the race after midnight, with Fangio leading, but the race ran to the end on Sunday, with Hawthorn winning. Several countries immediately banned auto racing, including France, Germany and Switzerland, until safety was improved for spectators. Switzerland still has a ban on circuit racing in force today.", "answer": "Switzerland", "sentence": "Several countries immediately banned auto racing, including France, Germany and Switzerland , until safety was improved for spectators.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mercedes withdrew from the race after midnight, with Fangio leading, but the race ran to the end on Sunday, with Hawthorn winning. Several countries immediately banned auto racing, including France, Germany and Switzerland , until safety was improved for spectators. Switzerland still has a ban on circuit racing in force today.", "paragraph_answer": "Mercedes withdrew from the race after midnight, with Fangio leading, but the race ran to the end on Sunday, with Hawthorn winning. Several countries immediately banned auto racing, including France, Germany and Switzerland , until safety was improved for spectators. Switzerland still has a ban on circuit racing in force today.", "sentence_answer": "Several countries immediately banned auto racing, including France, Germany and Switzerland , until safety was improved for spectators."} +{"question": "How many countries banned auto racing after the incident?", "paragraph": "Mercedes withdrew from the race after midnight, with Fangio leading, but the race ran to the end on Sunday, with Hawthorn winning. Several countries immediately banned auto racing, including France, Germany and Switzerland, until safety was improved for spectators. Switzerland still has a ban on circuit racing in force today.", "answer": "Several", "sentence": "Several countries immediately banned auto racing, including France, Germany and Switzerland, until safety was improved for spectators.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mercedes withdrew from the race after midnight, with Fangio leading, but the race ran to the end on Sunday, with Hawthorn winning. Several countries immediately banned auto racing, including France, Germany and Switzerland, until safety was improved for spectators. Switzerland still has a ban on circuit racing in force today.", "paragraph_answer": "Mercedes withdrew from the race after midnight, with Fangio leading, but the race ran to the end on Sunday, with Hawthorn winning. Several countries immediately banned auto racing, including France, Germany and Switzerland, until safety was improved for spectators. Switzerland still has a ban on circuit racing in force today.", "sentence_answer": " Several countries immediately banned auto racing, including France, Germany and Switzerland, until safety was improved for spectators."} +{"question": "Which President appointed Justice Ginsburg to the Supreme Court?", "paragraph": "Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years, becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "answer": "President Bill Clinton", "sentence": "In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor.", "paragraph_sentence": "Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years, becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "paragraph_answer": "Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years, becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "sentence_answer": "In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor."} +{"question": "Which type of medal was awarded to Steinem?", "paragraph": "Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years, becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "answer": "Presidential Medal of Freedom", "sentence": "She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013.", "paragraph_sentence": "Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years, becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "paragraph_answer": "Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years, becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "sentence_answer": "She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013."} +{"question": "How long was Steinem an editor for a magazine?", "paragraph": "Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years, becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "answer": "nearly 20 years", "sentence": "Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years , becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement.", "paragraph_sentence": "Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years , becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "paragraph_answer": "Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years , becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "sentence_answer": "Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years , becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement."} +{"question": "Who was the second female justice ever appointed to the Supreme Court?", "paragraph": "Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years, becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "answer": "Justice Ginsburg", "sentence": "Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980.", "paragraph_sentence": " Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years, becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "paragraph_answer": " Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years, becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "sentence_answer": " Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980."} +{"question": "What did Steinem win awards for?", "paragraph": "Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years, becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "answer": "media and advocacy", "sentence": "She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy , including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013.", "paragraph_sentence": "Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years, becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy , including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "paragraph_answer": "Justice Ginsburg was appointed by President Jimmy Carter to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980. In 1993, President Bill Clinton elevated her to the Supreme Court, making her the court\u2019s second female justice, following Sandra Day O\u2019Connor. (Justice Ginsburg is the subject of a tribute biography, \u201cNotorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg,\u201d by Irin Carmon and Shana Knizhnik.) Meanwhile, Ms. Steinem was an editor at Ms. for nearly 20 years, becoming the public face of the women\u2019s movement. (She continues at the magazine as an adviser.) She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy , including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. Her new book, \u201cMy Life on the Road,\u201d was published last month.", "sentence_answer": "She has traveled extensively, speaking out for women\u2019s and human rights, winning numerous awards for her work in media and advocacy , including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What couldn't women get while sterilization was also happening?", "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": "abortions", "sentence": "We couldn\u2019t get abortions .", "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": "We couldn\u2019t get abortions ."} +{"question": "Which organization was Ruth a part of?", "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": "A.C.L.U.", "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."} +{"question": "What movement was happening when GS had met Ruth?", "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": "women\u2019s movement", "sentence": "PG: Rap names aside, your careers unfolded side by side at the forefront of the women\u2019s movement .", "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": "PG: Rap names aside, your careers unfolded side by side at the forefront of the women\u2019s movement ."} +{"question": "Whose mother presented disappointment over a less than perfect report card?", "paragraph": "GS: Perhaps we were living out the unlived lives of our mothers. Mine wanted to be a writer and was a journalist long before I was born. First as a reporter, then an editor at a Toledo newspaper. RBG: My mother was a powerful influence. She made me toe the line. If I didn\u2019t have a perfect report card, she showed her disappointment. PG: Had she been a \u201cperfect report card\u201d kind of girl? RBG: She told a story about bringing home a report card with all A\u2019s to her father. But it didn\u2019t mean anything. She was a girl. My mother graduated from high school at 15 and went to work to support the family because the eldest son went to college. GS: So you were receiving her dreams. She was saying the opposite to you: not that your report card didn\u2019t count, but that it did.", "answer": "RBG", "sentence": "RBG : My mother was a powerful influence.", "paragraph_sentence": "GS: Perhaps we were living out the unlived lives of our mothers. Mine wanted to be a writer and was a journalist long before I was born. First as a reporter, then an editor at a Toledo newspaper. RBG : My mother was a powerful influence. She made me toe the line. If I didn\u2019t have a perfect report card, she showed her disappointment. PG: Had she been a \u201cperfect report card\u201d kind of girl? RBG: She told a story about bringing home a report card with all A\u2019s to her father. But it didn\u2019t mean anything. She was a girl. My mother graduated from high school at 15 and went to work to support the family because the eldest son went to college. GS: So you were receiving her dreams. She was saying the opposite to you: not that your report card didn\u2019t count, but that it did.", "paragraph_answer": "GS: Perhaps we were living out the unlived lives of our mothers. Mine wanted to be a writer and was a journalist long before I was born. First as a reporter, then an editor at a Toledo newspaper. RBG : My mother was a powerful influence. She made me toe the line. If I didn\u2019t have a perfect report card, she showed her disappointment. PG: Had she been a \u201cperfect report card\u201d kind of girl? RBG: She told a story about bringing home a report card with all A\u2019s to her father. But it didn\u2019t mean anything. She was a girl. My mother graduated from high school at 15 and went to work to support the family because the eldest son went to college. GS: So you were receiving her dreams. She was saying the opposite to you: not that your report card didn\u2019t count, but that it did.", "sentence_answer": " RBG : My mother was a powerful influence."} +{"question": "At what age did RBG's mother graduate?", "paragraph": "GS: Perhaps we were living out the unlived lives of our mothers. Mine wanted to be a writer and was a journalist long before I was born. First as a reporter, then an editor at a Toledo newspaper. RBG: My mother was a powerful influence. She made me toe the line. If I didn\u2019t have a perfect report card, she showed her disappointment. PG: Had she been a \u201cperfect report card\u201d kind of girl? RBG: She told a story about bringing home a report card with all A\u2019s to her father. But it didn\u2019t mean anything. She was a girl. My mother graduated from high school at 15 and went to work to support the family because the eldest son went to college. GS: So you were receiving her dreams. She was saying the opposite to you: not that your report card didn\u2019t count, but that it did.", "answer": "15", "sentence": "My mother graduated from high school at 15 and went to work to support the family because the eldest son went to college.", "paragraph_sentence": "GS: Perhaps we were living out the unlived lives of our mothers. Mine wanted to be a writer and was a journalist long before I was born. First as a reporter, then an editor at a Toledo newspaper. RBG: My mother was a powerful influence. She made me toe the line. If I didn\u2019t have a perfect report card, she showed her disappointment. PG: Had she been a \u201cperfect report card\u201d kind of girl? RBG: She told a story about bringing home a report card with all A\u2019s to her father. But it didn\u2019t mean anything. She was a girl. My mother graduated from high school at 15 and went to work to support the family because the eldest son went to college. GS: So you were receiving her dreams. She was saying the opposite to you: not that your report card didn\u2019t count, but that it did.", "paragraph_answer": "GS: Perhaps we were living out the unlived lives of our mothers. Mine wanted to be a writer and was a journalist long before I was born. First as a reporter, then an editor at a Toledo newspaper. RBG: My mother was a powerful influence. She made me toe the line. If I didn\u2019t have a perfect report card, she showed her disappointment. PG: Had she been a \u201cperfect report card\u201d kind of girl? RBG: She told a story about bringing home a report card with all A\u2019s to her father. But it didn\u2019t mean anything. She was a girl. My mother graduated from high school at 15 and went to work to support the family because the eldest son went to college. GS: So you were receiving her dreams. She was saying the opposite to you: not that your report card didn\u2019t count, but that it did.", "sentence_answer": "My mother graduated from high school at 15 and went to work to support the family because the eldest son went to college."} +{"question": "Whose mom worked as an editor for the Toledo newspaper?", "paragraph": "GS: Perhaps we were living out the unlived lives of our mothers. Mine wanted to be a writer and was a journalist long before I was born. First as a reporter, then an editor at a Toledo newspaper. RBG: My mother was a powerful influence. She made me toe the line. If I didn\u2019t have a perfect report card, she showed her disappointment. PG: Had she been a \u201cperfect report card\u201d kind of girl? RBG: She told a story about bringing home a report card with all A\u2019s to her father. But it didn\u2019t mean anything. She was a girl. My mother graduated from high school at 15 and went to work to support the family because the eldest son went to college. GS: So you were receiving her dreams. She was saying the opposite to you: not that your report card didn\u2019t count, but that it did.", "answer": "GS", "sentence": "GS : Perhaps we were living out the unlived lives of our mothers.", "paragraph_sentence": " GS : Perhaps we were living out the unlived lives of our mothers. Mine wanted to be a writer and was a journalist long before I was born. First as a reporter, then an editor at a Toledo newspaper. RBG: My mother was a powerful influence. She made me toe the line. If I didn\u2019t have a perfect report card, she showed her disappointment. PG: Had she been a \u201cperfect report card\u201d kind of girl? RBG: She told a story about bringing home a report card with all A\u2019s to her father. But it didn\u2019t mean anything. She was a girl. My mother graduated from high school at 15 and went to work to support the family because the eldest son went to college. GS: So you were receiving her dreams. She was saying the opposite to you: not that your report card didn\u2019t count, but that it did.", "paragraph_answer": " GS : Perhaps we were living out the unlived lives of our mothers. Mine wanted to be a writer and was a journalist long before I was born. First as a reporter, then an editor at a Toledo newspaper. RBG: My mother was a powerful influence. She made me toe the line. If I didn\u2019t have a perfect report card, she showed her disappointment. PG: Had she been a \u201cperfect report card\u201d kind of girl? RBG: She told a story about bringing home a report card with all A\u2019s to her father. But it didn\u2019t mean anything. She was a girl. My mother graduated from high school at 15 and went to work to support the family because the eldest son went to college. GS: So you were receiving her dreams. She was saying the opposite to you: not that your report card didn\u2019t count, but that it did.", "sentence_answer": " GS : Perhaps we were living out the unlived lives of our mothers."} +{"question": "What did RBG's mother do after she graduated high school?", "paragraph": "GS: Perhaps we were living out the unlived lives of our mothers. Mine wanted to be a writer and was a journalist long before I was born. First as a reporter, then an editor at a Toledo newspaper. RBG: My mother was a powerful influence. She made me toe the line. If I didn\u2019t have a perfect report card, she showed her disappointment. PG: Had she been a \u201cperfect report card\u201d kind of girl? RBG: She told a story about bringing home a report card with all A\u2019s to her father. But it didn\u2019t mean anything. She was a girl. My mother graduated from high school at 15 and went to work to support the family because the eldest son went to college. GS: So you were receiving her dreams. She was saying the opposite to you: not that your report card didn\u2019t count, but that it did.", "answer": "went to work to support the family", "sentence": "My mother graduated from high school at 15 and went to work to support the family because the eldest son went to college.", "paragraph_sentence": "GS: Perhaps we were living out the unlived lives of our mothers. Mine wanted to be a writer and was a journalist long before I was born. First as a reporter, then an editor at a Toledo newspaper. RBG: My mother was a powerful influence. She made me toe the line. If I didn\u2019t have a perfect report card, she showed her disappointment. PG: Had she been a \u201cperfect report card\u201d kind of girl? RBG: She told a story about bringing home a report card with all A\u2019s to her father. But it didn\u2019t mean anything. She was a girl. My mother graduated from high school at 15 and went to work to support the family because the eldest son went to college. GS: So you were receiving her dreams. She was saying the opposite to you: not that your report card didn\u2019t count, but that it did.", "paragraph_answer": "GS: Perhaps we were living out the unlived lives of our mothers. Mine wanted to be a writer and was a journalist long before I was born. First as a reporter, then an editor at a Toledo newspaper. RBG: My mother was a powerful influence. She made me toe the line. If I didn\u2019t have a perfect report card, she showed her disappointment. PG: Had she been a \u201cperfect report card\u201d kind of girl? RBG: She told a story about bringing home a report card with all A\u2019s to her father. But it didn\u2019t mean anything. She was a girl. My mother graduated from high school at 15 and went to work to support the family because the eldest son went to college. GS: So you were receiving her dreams. She was saying the opposite to you: not that your report card didn\u2019t count, but that it did.", "sentence_answer": "My mother graduated from high school at 15 and went to work to support the family because the eldest son went to college."} +{"question": "What did the sign-up sheets say?", "paragraph": "RBG: There were many firms who put up sign-up sheets that said, \u201cMen Only.\u201d And I had three strikes against me. First, I was Jewish, and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews. Then I was a woman. But the killer was my daughter Jane, who was 4 by then. PG: They didn\u2019t even hide why they were rejecting you? GS: No. I tried to get a much less prestigious job, at Time magazine. And they made it very clear that women researched, and men wrote. No exceptions, in spite of Clare Boothe Luce. PG: You remind me of my grandmother\u2019s line: Rejection is the best thing that can happen. It pushes us. There might not be a Ms. magazine or Notorious R.B.G. without it.", "answer": "\u201cMen Only.\u201d", "sentence": "RBG: There were many firms who put up sign-up sheets that said, \u201cMen Only.\u201d And I had three strikes against me.", "paragraph_sentence": " RBG: There were many firms who put up sign-up sheets that said, \u201cMen Only.\u201d And I had three strikes against me. First, I was Jewish, and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews. Then I was a woman. But the killer was my daughter Jane, who was 4 by then. PG: They didn\u2019t even hide why they were rejecting you? GS: No. I tried to get a much less prestigious job, at Time magazine. And they made it very clear that women researched, and men wrote. No exceptions, in spite of Clare Boothe Luce. PG: You remind me of my grandmother\u2019s line: Rejection is the best thing that can happen. It pushes us. There might not be a Ms. magazine or Notorious R.B.G. without it.", "paragraph_answer": "RBG: There were many firms who put up sign-up sheets that said, \u201cMen Only.\u201d And I had three strikes against me. First, I was Jewish, and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews. Then I was a woman. But the killer was my daughter Jane, who was 4 by then. PG: They didn\u2019t even hide why they were rejecting you? GS: No. I tried to get a much less prestigious job, at Time magazine. And they made it very clear that women researched, and men wrote. No exceptions, in spite of Clare Boothe Luce. PG: You remind me of my grandmother\u2019s line: Rejection is the best thing that can happen. It pushes us. There might not be a Ms. magazine or Notorious R.B.G. without it.", "sentence_answer": "RBG: There were many firms who put up sign-up sheets that said, \u201cMen Only.\u201d And I had three strikes against me."} +{"question": "Where id GS tried to work at?", "paragraph": "RBG: There were many firms who put up sign-up sheets that said, \u201cMen Only.\u201d And I had three strikes against me. First, I was Jewish, and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews. Then I was a woman. But the killer was my daughter Jane, who was 4 by then. PG: They didn\u2019t even hide why they were rejecting you? GS: No. I tried to get a much less prestigious job, at Time magazine. And they made it very clear that women researched, and men wrote. No exceptions, in spite of Clare Boothe Luce. PG: You remind me of my grandmother\u2019s line: Rejection is the best thing that can happen. It pushes us. There might not be a Ms. magazine or Notorious R.B.G. without it.", "answer": "Time magazine", "sentence": "I tried to get a much less prestigious job, at Time magazine .", "paragraph_sentence": "RBG: There were many firms who put up sign-up sheets that said, \u201cMen Only.\u201d And I had three strikes against me. First, I was Jewish, and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews. Then I was a woman. But the killer was my daughter Jane, who was 4 by then. PG: They didn\u2019t even hide why they were rejecting you? GS: No. I tried to get a much less prestigious job, at Time magazine . And they made it very clear that women researched, and men wrote. No exceptions, in spite of Clare Boothe Luce. PG: You remind me of my grandmother\u2019s line: Rejection is the best thing that can happen. It pushes us. There might not be a Ms. magazine or Notorious R.B.G. without it.", "paragraph_answer": "RBG: There were many firms who put up sign-up sheets that said, \u201cMen Only.\u201d And I had three strikes against me. First, I was Jewish, and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews. Then I was a woman. But the killer was my daughter Jane, who was 4 by then. PG: They didn\u2019t even hide why they were rejecting you? GS: No. I tried to get a much less prestigious job, at Time magazine . And they made it very clear that women researched, and men wrote. No exceptions, in spite of Clare Boothe Luce. PG: You remind me of my grandmother\u2019s line: Rejection is the best thing that can happen. It pushes us. There might not be a Ms. magazine or Notorious R.B.G. without it.", "sentence_answer": "I tried to get a much less prestigious job, at Time magazine ."} +{"question": "What religion was RBG part of?", "paragraph": "RBG: There were many firms who put up sign-up sheets that said, \u201cMen Only.\u201d And I had three strikes against me. First, I was Jewish, and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews. Then I was a woman. But the killer was my daughter Jane, who was 4 by then. PG: They didn\u2019t even hide why they were rejecting you? GS: No. I tried to get a much less prestigious job, at Time magazine. And they made it very clear that women researched, and men wrote. No exceptions, in spite of Clare Boothe Luce. PG: You remind me of my grandmother\u2019s line: Rejection is the best thing that can happen. It pushes us. There might not be a Ms. magazine or Notorious R.B.G. without it.", "answer": "Jewish", "sentence": "First, I was Jewish , and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews.", "paragraph_sentence": "RBG: There were many firms who put up sign-up sheets that said, \u201cMen Only.\u201d And I had three strikes against me. First, I was Jewish , and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews. Then I was a woman. But the killer was my daughter Jane, who was 4 by then. PG: They didn\u2019t even hide why they were rejecting you? GS: No. I tried to get a much less prestigious job, at Time magazine. And they made it very clear that women researched, and men wrote. No exceptions, in spite of Clare Boothe Luce. PG: You remind me of my grandmother\u2019s line: Rejection is the best thing that can happen. It pushes us. There might not be a Ms. magazine or Notorious R.B.G. without it.", "paragraph_answer": "RBG: There were many firms who put up sign-up sheets that said, \u201cMen Only.\u201d And I had three strikes against me. First, I was Jewish , and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews. Then I was a woman. But the killer was my daughter Jane, who was 4 by then. PG: They didn\u2019t even hide why they were rejecting you? GS: No. I tried to get a much less prestigious job, at Time magazine. And they made it very clear that women researched, and men wrote. No exceptions, in spite of Clare Boothe Luce. PG: You remind me of my grandmother\u2019s line: Rejection is the best thing that can happen. It pushes us. There might not be a Ms. magazine or Notorious R.B.G. without it.", "sentence_answer": "First, I was Jewish , and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews."} +{"question": "Who was barely starting to accept Jews?", "paragraph": "RBG: There were many firms who put up sign-up sheets that said, \u201cMen Only.\u201d And I had three strikes against me. First, I was Jewish, and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews. Then I was a woman. But the killer was my daughter Jane, who was 4 by then. PG: They didn\u2019t even hide why they were rejecting you? GS: No. I tried to get a much less prestigious job, at Time magazine. And they made it very clear that women researched, and men wrote. No exceptions, in spite of Clare Boothe Luce. PG: You remind me of my grandmother\u2019s line: Rejection is the best thing that can happen. It pushes us. There might not be a Ms. magazine or Notorious R.B.G. without it.", "answer": "Wall Street firms", "sentence": "First, I was Jewish, and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews.", "paragraph_sentence": "RBG: There were many firms who put up sign-up sheets that said, \u201cMen Only.\u201d And I had three strikes against me. First, I was Jewish, and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews. Then I was a woman. But the killer was my daughter Jane, who was 4 by then. PG: They didn\u2019t even hide why they were rejecting you? GS: No. I tried to get a much less prestigious job, at Time magazine. And they made it very clear that women researched, and men wrote. No exceptions, in spite of Clare Boothe Luce. PG: You remind me of my grandmother\u2019s line: Rejection is the best thing that can happen. It pushes us. There might not be a Ms. magazine or Notorious R.B.G. without it.", "paragraph_answer": "RBG: There were many firms who put up sign-up sheets that said, \u201cMen Only.\u201d And I had three strikes against me. First, I was Jewish, and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews. Then I was a woman. But the killer was my daughter Jane, who was 4 by then. PG: They didn\u2019t even hide why they were rejecting you? GS: No. I tried to get a much less prestigious job, at Time magazine. And they made it very clear that women researched, and men wrote. No exceptions, in spite of Clare Boothe Luce. PG: You remind me of my grandmother\u2019s line: Rejection is the best thing that can happen. It pushes us. There might not be a Ms. magazine or Notorious R.B.G. without it.", "sentence_answer": "First, I was Jewish, and the Wall Street firms were just beginning to accept Jews."} +{"question": "Who worked for no pay for a county attorney?", "paragraph": "RBG: Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school. We\u2019d be retired partners from large law firms today.\u201d She got her first job working for free for a county attorney, and she was very high in her class at Stanford. GS: The great thing about obstacles is that they cause you to identify with other groups of people who are facing obstacles. PG: When did you start thinking seriously about women\u2019s equality? RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden, in 1962 and \u201963. GS: For which she learned Swedish. Is that not incredible?", "answer": "Justice O\u2019Connor", "sentence": "RBG: Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school.", "paragraph_sentence": " RBG: Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school. We\u2019d be retired partners from large law firms today.\u201d She got her first job working for free for a county attorney, and she was very high in her class at Stanford. GS: The great thing about obstacles is that they cause you to identify with other groups of people who are facing obstacles. PG: When did you start thinking seriously about women\u2019s equality? RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden, in 1962 and \u201963. GS: For which she learned Swedish. Is that not incredible?", "paragraph_answer": "RBG: Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school. We\u2019d be retired partners from large law firms today.\u201d She got her first job working for free for a county attorney, and she was very high in her class at Stanford. GS: The great thing about obstacles is that they cause you to identify with other groups of people who are facing obstacles. PG: When did you start thinking seriously about women\u2019s equality? RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden, in 1962 and \u201963. GS: For which she learned Swedish. Is that not incredible?", "sentence_answer": "RBG: Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school."} +{"question": "What school did Justice O'Connor attend?", "paragraph": "RBG: Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school. We\u2019d be retired partners from large law firms today.\u201d She got her first job working for free for a county attorney, and she was very high in her class at Stanford. GS: The great thing about obstacles is that they cause you to identify with other groups of people who are facing obstacles. PG: When did you start thinking seriously about women\u2019s equality? RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden, in 1962 and \u201963. GS: For which she learned Swedish. Is that not incredible?", "answer": "Stanford", "sentence": "She got her first job working for free for a county attorney, and she was very high in her class at Stanford .", "paragraph_sentence": "RBG: Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school. We\u2019d be retired partners from large law firms today.\u201d She got her first job working for free for a county attorney, and she was very high in her class at Stanford . GS: The great thing about obstacles is that they cause you to identify with other groups of people who are facing obstacles. PG: When did you start thinking seriously about women\u2019s equality? RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden, in 1962 and \u201963. GS: For which she learned Swedish. Is that not incredible?", "paragraph_answer": "RBG: Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school. We\u2019d be retired partners from large law firms today.\u201d She got her first job working for free for a county attorney, and she was very high in her class at Stanford . GS: The great thing about obstacles is that they cause you to identify with other groups of people who are facing obstacles. PG: When did you start thinking seriously about women\u2019s equality? RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden, in 1962 and \u201963. GS: For which she learned Swedish. Is that not incredible?", "sentence_answer": "She got her first job working for free for a county attorney, and she was very high in her class at Stanford ."} +{"question": "Where was RBG located during 1962 and 1963?", "paragraph": "RBG: Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school. We\u2019d be retired partners from large law firms today.\u201d She got her first job working for free for a county attorney, and she was very high in her class at Stanford. GS: The great thing about obstacles is that they cause you to identify with other groups of people who are facing obstacles. PG: When did you start thinking seriously about women\u2019s equality? RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden, in 1962 and \u201963. GS: For which she learned Swedish. Is that not incredible?", "answer": "Sweden", "sentence": "RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden , in 1962 and \u201963.", "paragraph_sentence": "RBG: Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school. We\u2019d be retired partners from large law firms today.\u201d She got her first job working for free for a county attorney, and she was very high in her class at Stanford. GS: The great thing about obstacles is that they cause you to identify with other groups of people who are facing obstacles. PG: When did you start thinking seriously about women\u2019s equality? RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden , in 1962 and \u201963. GS: For which she learned Swedish. Is that not incredible?", "paragraph_answer": "RBG: Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school. We\u2019d be retired partners from large law firms today.\u201d She got her first job working for free for a county attorney, and she was very high in her class at Stanford. GS: The great thing about obstacles is that they cause you to identify with other groups of people who are facing obstacles. PG: When did you start thinking seriously about women\u2019s equality? RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden , in 1962 and \u201963. GS: For which she learned Swedish. Is that not incredible?", "sentence_answer": "RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden , in 1962 and \u201963."} +{"question": "Who worked on a book on civil procedure?", "paragraph": "RBG: Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school. We\u2019d be retired partners from large law firms today.\u201d She got her first job working for free for a county attorney, and she was very high in her class at Stanford. GS: The great thing about obstacles is that they cause you to identify with other groups of people who are facing obstacles. PG: When did you start thinking seriously about women\u2019s equality? RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden, in 1962 and \u201963. GS: For which she learned Swedish. Is that not incredible?", "answer": "RBG", "sentence": "RBG : Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school.", "paragraph_sentence": " RBG : Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school. We\u2019d be retired partners from large law firms today.\u201d She got her first job working for free for a county attorney, and she was very high in her class at Stanford. GS: The great thing about obstacles is that they cause you to identify with other groups of people who are facing obstacles. PG: When did you start thinking seriously about women\u2019s equality? RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden, in 1962 and \u201963. GS: For which she learned Swedish. Is that not incredible?", "paragraph_answer": " RBG : Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school. We\u2019d be retired partners from large law firms today.\u201d She got her first job working for free for a county attorney, and she was very high in her class at Stanford. GS: The great thing about obstacles is that they cause you to identify with other groups of people who are facing obstacles. PG: When did you start thinking seriously about women\u2019s equality? RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden, in 1962 and \u201963. GS: For which she learned Swedish. Is that not incredible?", "sentence_answer": " RBG : Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school."} +{"question": "Who learned Swedish?", "paragraph": "RBG: Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school. We\u2019d be retired partners from large law firms today.\u201d She got her first job working for free for a county attorney, and she was very high in her class at Stanford. GS: The great thing about obstacles is that they cause you to identify with other groups of people who are facing obstacles. PG: When did you start thinking seriously about women\u2019s equality? RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden, in 1962 and \u201963. GS: For which she learned Swedish. Is that not incredible?", "answer": "RBG", "sentence": "RBG : Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school.", "paragraph_sentence": " RBG : Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school. We\u2019d be retired partners from large law firms today.\u201d She got her first job working for free for a county attorney, and she was very high in her class at Stanford. GS: The great thing about obstacles is that they cause you to identify with other groups of people who are facing obstacles. PG: When did you start thinking seriously about women\u2019s equality? RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden, in 1962 and \u201963. GS: For which she learned Swedish. Is that not incredible?", "paragraph_answer": " RBG : Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school. We\u2019d be retired partners from large law firms today.\u201d She got her first job working for free for a county attorney, and she was very high in her class at Stanford. GS: The great thing about obstacles is that they cause you to identify with other groups of people who are facing obstacles. PG: When did you start thinking seriously about women\u2019s equality? RBG: When I was working on a book about civil procedure in Sweden, in 1962 and \u201963. GS: For which she learned Swedish. Is that not incredible?", "sentence_answer": " RBG : Justice O\u2019Connor once said: \u201cSuppose there had been no discrimination when we finished law school."} +{"question": "How many women were law students in Sweden?", "paragraph": "RBG: Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women. And there were women on the bench. I went to one proceeding in Stockholm where the presiding judge was eight months pregnant. There was also a journalist who wrote a column in the Swedish daily paper: \u201cWhy should women have two jobs, and men only one?\u201d Inflation was high, and two incomes were often needed. But it was the woman who was expected to buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7. I remember listening to those conversations. It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS: For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it. But I was slow to see how it applied here. I couldn\u2019t quite bridge that gap until the late \u201960s.", "answer": "20 and 25 percent", "sentence": "RBG: Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women.", "paragraph_sentence": " RBG: Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women. And there were women on the bench. I went to one proceeding in Stockholm where the presiding judge was eight months pregnant. There was also a journalist who wrote a column in the Swedish daily paper: \u201cWhy should women have two jobs, and men only one?\u201d Inflation was high, and two incomes were often needed. But it was the woman who was expected to buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7. I remember listening to those conversations. It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS: For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it. But I was slow to see how it applied here. I couldn\u2019t quite bridge that gap until the late \u201960s.", "paragraph_answer": "RBG: Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women. And there were women on the bench. I went to one proceeding in Stockholm where the presiding judge was eight months pregnant. There was also a journalist who wrote a column in the Swedish daily paper: \u201cWhy should women have two jobs, and men only one?\u201d Inflation was high, and two incomes were often needed. But it was the woman who was expected to buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7. I remember listening to those conversations. It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS: For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it. But I was slow to see how it applied here. I couldn\u2019t quite bridge that gap until the late \u201960s.", "sentence_answer": "RBG: Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women."} +{"question": "What were women expected to do?", "paragraph": "RBG: Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women. And there were women on the bench. I went to one proceeding in Stockholm where the presiding judge was eight months pregnant. There was also a journalist who wrote a column in the Swedish daily paper: \u201cWhy should women have two jobs, and men only one?\u201d Inflation was high, and two incomes were often needed. But it was the woman who was expected to buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7. I remember listening to those conversations. It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS: For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it. But I was slow to see how it applied here. I couldn\u2019t quite bridge that gap until the late \u201960s.", "answer": "buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7", "sentence": "But it was the woman who was expected to buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7 .", "paragraph_sentence": "RBG: Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women. And there were women on the bench. I went to one proceeding in Stockholm where the presiding judge was eight months pregnant. There was also a journalist who wrote a column in the Swedish daily paper: \u201cWhy should women have two jobs, and men only one?\u201d Inflation was high, and two incomes were often needed. But it was the woman who was expected to buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7 . I remember listening to those conversations. It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS: For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it. But I was slow to see how it applied here. I couldn\u2019t quite bridge that gap until the late \u201960s.", "paragraph_answer": "RBG: Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women. And there were women on the bench. I went to one proceeding in Stockholm where the presiding judge was eight months pregnant. There was also a journalist who wrote a column in the Swedish daily paper: \u201cWhy should women have two jobs, and men only one?\u201d Inflation was high, and two incomes were often needed. But it was the woman who was expected to buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7 . I remember listening to those conversations. It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS: For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it. But I was slow to see how it applied here. I couldn\u2019t quite bridge that gap until the late \u201960s.", "sentence_answer": "But it was the woman who was expected to buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7 ."} +{"question": "Who read the book, The Second Sex?", "paragraph": "RBG: Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women. And there were women on the bench. I went to one proceeding in Stockholm where the presiding judge was eight months pregnant. There was also a journalist who wrote a column in the Swedish daily paper: \u201cWhy should women have two jobs, and men only one?\u201d Inflation was high, and two incomes were often needed. But it was the woman who was expected to buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7. I remember listening to those conversations. It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS: For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it. But I was slow to see how it applied here. I couldn\u2019t quite bridge that gap until the late \u201960s.", "answer": "RBG", "sentence": "RBG : Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women.", "paragraph_sentence": " RBG : Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women. And there were women on the bench. I went to one proceeding in Stockholm where the presiding judge was eight months pregnant. There was also a journalist who wrote a column in the Swedish daily paper: \u201cWhy should women have two jobs, and men only one?\u201d Inflation was high, and two incomes were often needed. But it was the woman who was expected to buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7. I remember listening to those conversations. It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS: For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it. But I was slow to see how it applied here. I couldn\u2019t quite bridge that gap until the late \u201960s.", "paragraph_answer": " RBG : Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women. And there were women on the bench. I went to one proceeding in Stockholm where the presiding judge was eight months pregnant. There was also a journalist who wrote a column in the Swedish daily paper: \u201cWhy should women have two jobs, and men only one?\u201d Inflation was high, and two incomes were often needed. But it was the woman who was expected to buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7. I remember listening to those conversations. It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS: For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it. But I was slow to see how it applied here. I couldn\u2019t quite bridge that gap until the late \u201960s.", "sentence_answer": " RBG : Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women."} +{"question": "Who lived in India at some point?", "paragraph": "RBG: Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women. And there were women on the bench. I went to one proceeding in Stockholm where the presiding judge was eight months pregnant. There was also a journalist who wrote a column in the Swedish daily paper: \u201cWhy should women have two jobs, and men only one?\u201d Inflation was high, and two incomes were often needed. But it was the woman who was expected to buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7. I remember listening to those conversations. It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS: For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it. But I was slow to see how it applied here. I couldn\u2019t quite bridge that gap until the late \u201960s.", "answer": "GS", "sentence": "It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS : For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it.", "paragraph_sentence": "RBG: Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women. And there were women on the bench. I went to one proceeding in Stockholm where the presiding judge was eight months pregnant. There was also a journalist who wrote a column in the Swedish daily paper: \u201cWhy should women have two jobs, and men only one?\u201d Inflation was high, and two incomes were often needed. But it was the woman who was expected to buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7. I remember listening to those conversations. It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS : For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it. But I was slow to see how it applied here. I couldn\u2019t quite bridge that gap until the late \u201960s.", "paragraph_answer": "RBG: Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women. And there were women on the bench. I went to one proceeding in Stockholm where the presiding judge was eight months pregnant. There was also a journalist who wrote a column in the Swedish daily paper: \u201cWhy should women have two jobs, and men only one?\u201d Inflation was high, and two incomes were often needed. But it was the woman who was expected to buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7. I remember listening to those conversations. It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS : For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it. But I was slow to see how it applied here. I couldn\u2019t quite bridge that gap until the late \u201960s.", "sentence_answer": "It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS : For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it."} +{"question": "Where was it questioned why women should work two jobs while men only one?", "paragraph": "RBG: Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women. And there were women on the bench. I went to one proceeding in Stockholm where the presiding judge was eight months pregnant. There was also a journalist who wrote a column in the Swedish daily paper: \u201cWhy should women have two jobs, and men only one?\u201d Inflation was high, and two incomes were often needed. But it was the woman who was expected to buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7. I remember listening to those conversations. It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS: For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it. But I was slow to see how it applied here. I couldn\u2019t quite bridge that gap until the late \u201960s.", "answer": "Swedish daily paper", "sentence": "There was also a journalist who wrote a column in the Swedish daily paper : \u201cWhy should women have two jobs, and men only one?\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "RBG: Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women. And there were women on the bench. I went to one proceeding in Stockholm where the presiding judge was eight months pregnant. There was also a journalist who wrote a column in the Swedish daily paper : \u201cWhy should women have two jobs, and men only one?\u201d Inflation was high, and two incomes were often needed. But it was the woman who was expected to buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7. I remember listening to those conversations. It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS: For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it. But I was slow to see how it applied here. I couldn\u2019t quite bridge that gap until the late \u201960s.", "paragraph_answer": "RBG: Between 20 and 25 percent of the law students in Sweden were women. And there were women on the bench. I went to one proceeding in Stockholm where the presiding judge was eight months pregnant. There was also a journalist who wrote a column in the Swedish daily paper : \u201cWhy should women have two jobs, and men only one?\u201d Inflation was high, and two incomes were often needed. But it was the woman who was expected to buy the kids new shoes and have dinner on the table at 7. I remember listening to those conversations. It was that same summer I read \u201cThe Second Sex.\u201d GS: For me, an important point came when I was living in India, because of the Gandhian movement and the role of women in it. But I was slow to see how it applied here. I couldn\u2019t quite bridge that gap until the late \u201960s.", "sentence_answer": "There was also a journalist who wrote a column in the Swedish daily paper : \u201cWhy should women have two jobs, and men only one?\u201d"} +{"question": "What did people express about equality for women?", "paragraph": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible. My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished. It was considered frivolous.", "answer": "disinterested or said it was impossible", "sentence": "They were either disinterested or said it was impossible .", "paragraph_sentence": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible . My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished. It was considered frivolous.", "paragraph_answer": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible . My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished. It was considered frivolous.", "sentence_answer": "They were either disinterested or said it was impossible ."} +{"question": "Who would write an article stating women weren't equal?", "paragraph": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible. My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished. It was considered frivolous.", "answer": "an editor", "sentence": "My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible. My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished. It was considered frivolous.", "paragraph_answer": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible. My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished. It was considered frivolous.", "sentence_answer": "My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d"} +{"question": "What did people believe would happen if women was focused on gender equality?", "paragraph": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible. My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished. It was considered frivolous.", "answer": "her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished", "sentence": "RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished .", "paragraph_sentence": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible. My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished . It was considered frivolous.", "paragraph_answer": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible. My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished . It was considered frivolous.", "sentence_answer": "RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished ."} +{"question": "Who said people considered gender equality to not be of value?", "paragraph": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible. My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG: The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished. It was considered frivolous.", "answer": "RBG", "sentence": "RBG : The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished.", "paragraph_sentence": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible. My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG : The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished. It was considered frivolous.", "paragraph_answer": "PG: How did people respond when you first raised concerns about equality for women? GS: They were either disinterested or said it was impossible. My classic experience was an editor who said, \u201cO.K., you can publish an article saying women are equal.\u201d But right next to it, he would publish an article that said that they weren\u2019t \u2014 to be objective. RBG : The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished. It was considered frivolous.", "sentence_answer": " RBG : The concern was that if a woman was doing gender equality, her chances of making it to tenure in the law school were diminished."} +{"question": "Who is the actor that gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life?", "paragraph": "Perhaps this is Mr. Simon refusing to invent motives that aren\u2019t in the public record. In any case, it leaves him with a bit of a cipher at the middle of his story. The excellent actor Oscar Isaac (\u201cInside Llewyn Davis\u201d) gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life, projecting decency, nervous energy, joy and disappointment, but he never seems to have quite enough to work with. That\u2019s reflected in the series, which occasionally takes a break from its tightly scripted council meetings and back-room deals for emotion-building montages set to Bruce Springsteen songs (\u201cHungry Heart,\u201d \u201cBrilliant Disguise,\u201d \u201cSecret Garden\u201d). The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester.", "answer": "Oscar Isaac", "sentence": "The excellent actor Oscar Isaac (\u201cInside Llewyn Davis\u201d) gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life, projecting decency, nervous energy, joy and disappointment, but he never seems to have quite enough to work with.", "paragraph_sentence": "Perhaps this is Mr. Simon refusing to invent motives that aren\u2019t in the public record. In any case, it leaves him with a bit of a cipher at the middle of his story. The excellent actor Oscar Isaac (\u201cInside Llewyn Davis\u201d) gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life, projecting decency, nervous energy, joy and disappointment, but he never seems to have quite enough to work with. That\u2019s reflected in the series, which occasionally takes a break from its tightly scripted council meetings and back-room deals for emotion-building montages set to Bruce Springsteen songs (\u201cHungry Heart,\u201d \u201cBrilliant Disguise,\u201d \u201cSecret Garden\u201d). The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester.", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps this is Mr. Simon refusing to invent motives that aren\u2019t in the public record. In any case, it leaves him with a bit of a cipher at the middle of his story. The excellent actor Oscar Isaac (\u201cInside Llewyn Davis\u201d) gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life, projecting decency, nervous energy, joy and disappointment, but he never seems to have quite enough to work with. That\u2019s reflected in the series, which occasionally takes a break from its tightly scripted council meetings and back-room deals for emotion-building montages set to Bruce Springsteen songs (\u201cHungry Heart,\u201d \u201cBrilliant Disguise,\u201d \u201cSecret Garden\u201d). The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester.", "sentence_answer": "The excellent actor Oscar Isaac (\u201cInside Llewyn Davis\u201d) gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life, projecting decency, nervous energy, joy and disappointment, but he never seems to have quite enough to work with."} +{"question": "Who wrote the songs Hungry Heart, Brilliant Disguise, and Secret Garden?", "paragraph": "Perhaps this is Mr. Simon refusing to invent motives that aren\u2019t in the public record. In any case, it leaves him with a bit of a cipher at the middle of his story. The excellent actor Oscar Isaac (\u201cInside Llewyn Davis\u201d) gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life, projecting decency, nervous energy, joy and disappointment, but he never seems to have quite enough to work with. That\u2019s reflected in the series, which occasionally takes a break from its tightly scripted council meetings and back-room deals for emotion-building montages set to Bruce Springsteen songs (\u201cHungry Heart,\u201d \u201cBrilliant Disguise,\u201d \u201cSecret Garden\u201d). The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester.", "answer": "Bruce Springsteen", "sentence": "That\u2019s reflected in the series, which occasionally takes a break from its tightly scripted council meetings and back-room deals for emotion-building montages set to Bruce Springsteen songs (\u201cHungry Heart,\u201d \u201cBrilliant Disguise,\u201d \u201cSecret Garden\u201d).", "paragraph_sentence": "Perhaps this is Mr. Simon refusing to invent motives that aren\u2019t in the public record. In any case, it leaves him with a bit of a cipher at the middle of his story. The excellent actor Oscar Isaac (\u201cInside Llewyn Davis\u201d) gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life, projecting decency, nervous energy, joy and disappointment, but he never seems to have quite enough to work with. That\u2019s reflected in the series, which occasionally takes a break from its tightly scripted council meetings and back-room deals for emotion-building montages set to Bruce Springsteen songs (\u201cHungry Heart,\u201d \u201cBrilliant Disguise,\u201d \u201cSecret Garden\u201d). The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester.", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps this is Mr. Simon refusing to invent motives that aren\u2019t in the public record. In any case, it leaves him with a bit of a cipher at the middle of his story. The excellent actor Oscar Isaac (\u201cInside Llewyn Davis\u201d) gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life, projecting decency, nervous energy, joy and disappointment, but he never seems to have quite enough to work with. That\u2019s reflected in the series, which occasionally takes a break from its tightly scripted council meetings and back-room deals for emotion-building montages set to Bruce Springsteen songs (\u201cHungry Heart,\u201d \u201cBrilliant Disguise,\u201d \u201cSecret Garden\u201d). The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester.", "sentence_answer": "That\u2019s reflected in the series, which occasionally takes a break from its tightly scripted council meetings and back-room deals for emotion-building montages set to Bruce Springsteen songs (\u201cHungry Heart,\u201d \u201cBrilliant Disguise,\u201d \u201cSecret Garden\u201d)."} +{"question": "Which actor gives an amusing caricature of a machine politician?", "paragraph": "Perhaps this is Mr. Simon refusing to invent motives that aren\u2019t in the public record. In any case, it leaves him with a bit of a cipher at the middle of his story. The excellent actor Oscar Isaac (\u201cInside Llewyn Davis\u201d) gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life, projecting decency, nervous energy, joy and disappointment, but he never seems to have quite enough to work with. That\u2019s reflected in the series, which occasionally takes a break from its tightly scripted council meetings and back-room deals for emotion-building montages set to Bruce Springsteen songs (\u201cHungry Heart,\u201d \u201cBrilliant Disguise,\u201d \u201cSecret Garden\u201d). The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester.", "answer": "Alfred Molina", "sentence": "The cast also includes Alfred Molina , giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester.", "paragraph_sentence": "Perhaps this is Mr. Simon refusing to invent motives that aren\u2019t in the public record. In any case, it leaves him with a bit of a cipher at the middle of his story. The excellent actor Oscar Isaac (\u201cInside Llewyn Davis\u201d) gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life, projecting decency, nervous energy, joy and disappointment, but he never seems to have quite enough to work with. That\u2019s reflected in the series, which occasionally takes a break from its tightly scripted council meetings and back-room deals for emotion-building montages set to Bruce Springsteen songs (\u201cHungry Heart,\u201d \u201cBrilliant Disguise,\u201d \u201cSecret Garden\u201d). The cast also includes Alfred Molina , giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester. ", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps this is Mr. Simon refusing to invent motives that aren\u2019t in the public record. In any case, it leaves him with a bit of a cipher at the middle of his story. The excellent actor Oscar Isaac (\u201cInside Llewyn Davis\u201d) gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life, projecting decency, nervous energy, joy and disappointment, but he never seems to have quite enough to work with. That\u2019s reflected in the series, which occasionally takes a break from its tightly scripted council meetings and back-room deals for emotion-building montages set to Bruce Springsteen songs (\u201cHungry Heart,\u201d \u201cBrilliant Disguise,\u201d \u201cSecret Garden\u201d). The cast also includes Alfred Molina , giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester.", "sentence_answer": "The cast also includes Alfred Molina , giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester."} +{"question": "Which actor plays the head of the Yonkers housing authority?", "paragraph": "Perhaps this is Mr. Simon refusing to invent motives that aren\u2019t in the public record. In any case, it leaves him with a bit of a cipher at the middle of his story. The excellent actor Oscar Isaac (\u201cInside Llewyn Davis\u201d) gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life, projecting decency, nervous energy, joy and disappointment, but he never seems to have quite enough to work with. That\u2019s reflected in the series, which occasionally takes a break from its tightly scripted council meetings and back-room deals for emotion-building montages set to Bruce Springsteen songs (\u201cHungry Heart,\u201d \u201cBrilliant Disguise,\u201d \u201cSecret Garden\u201d). The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester.", "answer": "Terry Kinney", "sentence": "The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester.", "paragraph_sentence": "Perhaps this is Mr. Simon refusing to invent motives that aren\u2019t in the public record. In any case, it leaves him with a bit of a cipher at the middle of his story. The excellent actor Oscar Isaac (\u201cInside Llewyn Davis\u201d) gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life, projecting decency, nervous energy, joy and disappointment, but he never seems to have quite enough to work with. That\u2019s reflected in the series, which occasionally takes a break from its tightly scripted council meetings and back-room deals for emotion-building montages set to Bruce Springsteen songs (\u201cHungry Heart,\u201d \u201cBrilliant Disguise,\u201d \u201cSecret Garden\u201d). The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester. ", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps this is Mr. Simon refusing to invent motives that aren\u2019t in the public record. In any case, it leaves him with a bit of a cipher at the middle of his story. The excellent actor Oscar Isaac (\u201cInside Llewyn Davis\u201d) gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life, projecting decency, nervous energy, joy and disappointment, but he never seems to have quite enough to work with. That\u2019s reflected in the series, which occasionally takes a break from its tightly scripted council meetings and back-room deals for emotion-building montages set to Bruce Springsteen songs (\u201cHungry Heart,\u201d \u201cBrilliant Disguise,\u201d \u201cSecret Garden\u201d). The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester.", "sentence_answer": "The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester."} +{"question": "Which actress plays the part of an anti-integration protester?", "paragraph": "Perhaps this is Mr. Simon refusing to invent motives that aren\u2019t in the public record. In any case, it leaves him with a bit of a cipher at the middle of his story. The excellent actor Oscar Isaac (\u201cInside Llewyn Davis\u201d) gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life, projecting decency, nervous energy, joy and disappointment, but he never seems to have quite enough to work with. That\u2019s reflected in the series, which occasionally takes a break from its tightly scripted council meetings and back-room deals for emotion-building montages set to Bruce Springsteen songs (\u201cHungry Heart,\u201d \u201cBrilliant Disguise,\u201d \u201cSecret Garden\u201d). The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester.", "answer": "Catherine Keener", "sentence": "The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester.", "paragraph_sentence": "Perhaps this is Mr. Simon refusing to invent motives that aren\u2019t in the public record. In any case, it leaves him with a bit of a cipher at the middle of his story. The excellent actor Oscar Isaac (\u201cInside Llewyn Davis\u201d) gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life, projecting decency, nervous energy, joy and disappointment, but he never seems to have quite enough to work with. That\u2019s reflected in the series, which occasionally takes a break from its tightly scripted council meetings and back-room deals for emotion-building montages set to Bruce Springsteen songs (\u201cHungry Heart,\u201d \u201cBrilliant Disguise,\u201d \u201cSecret Garden\u201d). The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester. ", "paragraph_answer": "Perhaps this is Mr. Simon refusing to invent motives that aren\u2019t in the public record. In any case, it leaves him with a bit of a cipher at the middle of his story. The excellent actor Oscar Isaac (\u201cInside Llewyn Davis\u201d) gives Wasicsko a convincing semblance of life, projecting decency, nervous energy, joy and disappointment, but he never seems to have quite enough to work with. That\u2019s reflected in the series, which occasionally takes a break from its tightly scripted council meetings and back-room deals for emotion-building montages set to Bruce Springsteen songs (\u201cHungry Heart,\u201d \u201cBrilliant Disguise,\u201d \u201cSecret Garden\u201d). The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester.", "sentence_answer": "The cast also includes Alfred Molina, giving an amusing caricature of a machine politician, and a number of actors who do good work as various cogs in the political and legal apparatus: Bob Balaban as the judge, Terry Kinney as the head of the Yonkers housing authority, Clarke Peters as a smooth-talking consultant and, especially, Catherine Keener as an anti-integration protester."} +{"question": "Who plays a Dominican immigrant in Show Me a Hero?", "paragraph": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer. They all contribute to making \u201cShow Me a Hero\u201d more than worthwhile, and certainly as grounded and authentically textured as any television drama you\u2019re likely to come across. It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201cThe Wire,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201cTreme,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government.", "answer": "Ilfenesh Hadera", "sentence": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer.", "paragraph_sentence": " Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer. They all contribute to making \u201cShow Me a Hero\u201d more than worthwhile, and certainly as grounded and authentically textured as any television drama you\u2019re likely to come across. It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201cThe Wire,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201cTreme,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government.", "paragraph_answer": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer. They all contribute to making \u201cShow Me a Hero\u201d more than worthwhile, and certainly as grounded and authentically textured as any television drama you\u2019re likely to come across. It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201cThe Wire,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201cTreme,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government.", "sentence_answer": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer."} +{"question": "Which actress plays the young black mother?", "paragraph": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer. They all contribute to making \u201cShow Me a Hero\u201d more than worthwhile, and certainly as grounded and authentically textured as any television drama you\u2019re likely to come across. It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201cThe Wire,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201cTreme,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government.", "answer": "Dominique Fishback", "sentence": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer.", "paragraph_sentence": " Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer. They all contribute to making \u201cShow Me a Hero\u201d more than worthwhile, and certainly as grounded and authentically textured as any television drama you\u2019re likely to come across. It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201cThe Wire,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201cTreme,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government.", "paragraph_answer": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer. They all contribute to making \u201cShow Me a Hero\u201d more than worthwhile, and certainly as grounded and authentically textured as any television drama you\u2019re likely to come across. It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201cThe Wire,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201cTreme,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government.", "sentence_answer": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer."} +{"question": "Which actress plays the budding community organizer?", "paragraph": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer. They all contribute to making \u201cShow Me a Hero\u201d more than worthwhile, and certainly as grounded and authentically textured as any television drama you\u2019re likely to come across. It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201cThe Wire,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201cTreme,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government.", "answer": "Natalie Paul", "sentence": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer.", "paragraph_sentence": " Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer. They all contribute to making \u201cShow Me a Hero\u201d more than worthwhile, and certainly as grounded and authentically textured as any television drama you\u2019re likely to come across. It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201cThe Wire,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201cTreme,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government.", "paragraph_answer": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer. They all contribute to making \u201cShow Me a Hero\u201d more than worthwhile, and certainly as grounded and authentically textured as any television drama you\u2019re likely to come across. It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201cThe Wire,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201cTreme,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government.", "sentence_answer": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer."} +{"question": "What show is known for the visceral pull of mystery and violence?", "paragraph": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer. They all contribute to making \u201cShow Me a Hero\u201d more than worthwhile, and certainly as grounded and authentically textured as any television drama you\u2019re likely to come across. It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201cThe Wire,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201cTreme,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government.", "answer": "The Wire", "sentence": "It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201c The Wire ,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201cTreme,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government.", "paragraph_sentence": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer. They all contribute to making \u201cShow Me a Hero\u201d more than worthwhile, and certainly as grounded and authentically textured as any television drama you\u2019re likely to come across. It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201c The Wire ,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201cTreme,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government. ", "paragraph_answer": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer. They all contribute to making \u201cShow Me a Hero\u201d more than worthwhile, and certainly as grounded and authentically textured as any television drama you\u2019re likely to come across. It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201c The Wire ,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201cTreme,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government.", "sentence_answer": "It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201c The Wire ,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201cTreme,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government."} +{"question": "What show has the emotional highs of music?", "paragraph": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer. They all contribute to making \u201cShow Me a Hero\u201d more than worthwhile, and certainly as grounded and authentically textured as any television drama you\u2019re likely to come across. It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201cThe Wire,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201cTreme,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government.", "answer": "Treme", "sentence": "It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201cThe Wire,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201c Treme ,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government.", "paragraph_sentence": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer. They all contribute to making \u201cShow Me a Hero\u201d more than worthwhile, and certainly as grounded and authentically textured as any television drama you\u2019re likely to come across. It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201cThe Wire,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201c Treme ,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government. ", "paragraph_answer": "Equally fine on the other side of the story, which is dominated by women, are Ilfenesh Hadera as a Dominican immigrant, Dominique Fishback as a young black mother, and Natalie Paul as a budding community organizer. They all contribute to making \u201cShow Me a Hero\u201d more than worthwhile, and certainly as grounded and authentically textured as any television drama you\u2019re likely to come across. It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201cThe Wire,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201c Treme ,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government.", "sentence_answer": "It may not have the visceral pull that mystery and violence gave \u201cThe Wire,\u201d or the emotional highs that music gave \u201c Treme ,\u201d but you could do worse than a good lecture on civility, tolerance and the virtues of good government."} +{"question": "what is the very important indication?", "paragraph": "\u201cThis is a very important indication of how dysfunctional the government is and how incapable it is of dealing with the basic demands of the population,\u201d said Mario Abou Zeid, a research analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut. Across the city, trash piles have consumed sidewalks and engulfed parked cars, leaving pedestrians holding their noses and retching as the sweet aromas of rotting food waft through residential areas. Parking and gas station attendants forced to work outside have donned medical masks to reduce the smell, and other residents have fled the city altogether.", "answer": "how dysfunctional the government is and how incapable it is of dealing with the basic demands of the population", "sentence": "\u201cThis is a very important indication of how dysfunctional the government is and how incapable it is of dealing with the basic demands of the population ,\u201d said Mario Abou Zeid, a research analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThis is a very important indication of how dysfunctional the government is and how incapable it is of dealing with the basic demands of the population ,\u201d said Mario Abou Zeid, a research analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut. Across the city, trash piles have consumed sidewalks and engulfed parked cars, leaving pedestrians holding their noses and retching as the sweet aromas of rotting food waft through residential areas. Parking and gas station attendants forced to work outside have donned medical masks to reduce the smell, and other residents have fled the city altogether.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThis is a very important indication of how dysfunctional the government is and how incapable it is of dealing with the basic demands of the population ,\u201d said Mario Abou Zeid, a research analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut. Across the city, trash piles have consumed sidewalks and engulfed parked cars, leaving pedestrians holding their noses and retching as the sweet aromas of rotting food waft through residential areas. Parking and gas station attendants forced to work outside have donned medical masks to reduce the smell, and other residents have fled the city altogether.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThis is a very important indication of how dysfunctional the government is and how incapable it is of dealing with the basic demands of the population ,\u201d said Mario Abou Zeid, a research analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut."} +{"question": "who is Mario Abou Zeid?", "paragraph": "\u201cThis is a very important indication of how dysfunctional the government is and how incapable it is of dealing with the basic demands of the population,\u201d said Mario Abou Zeid, a research analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut. Across the city, trash piles have consumed sidewalks and engulfed parked cars, leaving pedestrians holding their noses and retching as the sweet aromas of rotting food waft through residential areas. Parking and gas station attendants forced to work outside have donned medical masks to reduce the smell, and other residents have fled the city altogether.", "answer": "research analyst", "sentence": "\u201cThis is a very important indication of how dysfunctional the government is and how incapable it is of dealing with the basic demands of the population,\u201d said Mario Abou Zeid, a research analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThis is a very important indication of how dysfunctional the government is and how incapable it is of dealing with the basic demands of the population,\u201d said Mario Abou Zeid, a research analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut. Across the city, trash piles have consumed sidewalks and engulfed parked cars, leaving pedestrians holding their noses and retching as the sweet aromas of rotting food waft through residential areas. Parking and gas station attendants forced to work outside have donned medical masks to reduce the smell, and other residents have fled the city altogether.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThis is a very important indication of how dysfunctional the government is and how incapable it is of dealing with the basic demands of the population,\u201d said Mario Abou Zeid, a research analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut. Across the city, trash piles have consumed sidewalks and engulfed parked cars, leaving pedestrians holding their noses and retching as the sweet aromas of rotting food waft through residential areas. Parking and gas station attendants forced to work outside have donned medical masks to reduce the smell, and other residents have fled the city altogether.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThis is a very important indication of how dysfunctional the government is and how incapable it is of dealing with the basic demands of the population,\u201d said Mario Abou Zeid, a research analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut."} +{"question": "Across which city has trash pilled up the side walks?", "paragraph": "\u201cThis is a very important indication of how dysfunctional the government is and how incapable it is of dealing with the basic demands of the population,\u201d said Mario Abou Zeid, a research analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut. Across the city, trash piles have consumed sidewalks and engulfed parked cars, leaving pedestrians holding their noses and retching as the sweet aromas of rotting food waft through residential areas. Parking and gas station attendants forced to work outside have donned medical masks to reduce the smell, and other residents have fled the city altogether.", "answer": "Beirut", "sentence": "\u201cThis is a very important indication of how dysfunctional the government is and how incapable it is of dealing with the basic demands of the population,\u201d said Mario Abou Zeid, a research analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThis is a very important indication of how dysfunctional the government is and how incapable it is of dealing with the basic demands of the population,\u201d said Mario Abou Zeid, a research analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut . Across the city, trash piles have consumed sidewalks and engulfed parked cars, leaving pedestrians holding their noses and retching as the sweet aromas of rotting food waft through residential areas. Parking and gas station attendants forced to work outside have donned medical masks to reduce the smell, and other residents have fled the city altogether.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThis is a very important indication of how dysfunctional the government is and how incapable it is of dealing with the basic demands of the population,\u201d said Mario Abou Zeid, a research analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut . Across the city, trash piles have consumed sidewalks and engulfed parked cars, leaving pedestrians holding their noses and retching as the sweet aromas of rotting food waft through residential areas. Parking and gas station attendants forced to work outside have donned medical masks to reduce the smell, and other residents have fled the city altogether.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThis is a very important indication of how dysfunctional the government is and how incapable it is of dealing with the basic demands of the population,\u201d said Mario Abou Zeid, a research analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut ."} +{"question": "who are the people forced to work outside ?", "paragraph": "\u201cThis is a very important indication of how dysfunctional the government is and how incapable it is of dealing with the basic demands of the population,\u201d said Mario Abou Zeid, a research analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut. Across the city, trash piles have consumed sidewalks and engulfed parked cars, leaving pedestrians holding their noses and retching as the sweet aromas of rotting food waft through residential areas. Parking and gas station attendants forced to work outside have donned medical masks to reduce the smell, and other residents have fled the city altogether.", "answer": "Parking and gas station attendants", "sentence": "Parking and gas station attendants forced to work outside have donned medical masks to reduce the smell, and other residents have fled the city altogether.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThis is a very important indication of how dysfunctional the government is and how incapable it is of dealing with the basic demands of the population,\u201d said Mario Abou Zeid, a research analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut. Across the city, trash piles have consumed sidewalks and engulfed parked cars, leaving pedestrians holding their noses and retching as the sweet aromas of rotting food waft through residential areas. Parking and gas station attendants forced to work outside have donned medical masks to reduce the smell, and other residents have fled the city altogether. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThis is a very important indication of how dysfunctional the government is and how incapable it is of dealing with the basic demands of the population,\u201d said Mario Abou Zeid, a research analyst at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut. Across the city, trash piles have consumed sidewalks and engulfed parked cars, leaving pedestrians holding their noses and retching as the sweet aromas of rotting food waft through residential areas. Parking and gas station attendants forced to work outside have donned medical masks to reduce the smell, and other residents have fled the city altogether.", "sentence_answer": " Parking and gas station attendants forced to work outside have donned medical masks to reduce the smell, and other residents have fled the city altogether."} +{"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"} +{"question": "why did people flee from Syria?", "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 civil war", "sentence": "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.", "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": " 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."} +{"question": "how many refugees fled to Lebanon?", "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": "1.2 million refugees", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "what left the country without president for 14 months?", "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": "Political divisions", "sentence": "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.", "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": " 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."} +{"question": "when did Lebanon civil war end?", "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": "1990", "sentence": "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_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": "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."} +{"question": "What president was swept aside last month?", "paragraph": "This lack of reaction was symptomatic of why the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan was swept aside last month \u2014 the first time an incumbent president has been successfully voted out of office in the history of our nation. For too long they ruled, not governed, and in doing so had become so focused on their own self-interest and embroiled in corruption that the duty to react to the anguish suffered by their citizens had become alien to them. My administration, which will take office on May 29, will act differently \u2014 indeed it is the very reason we have been elected. This must begin with honesty as to whether the Chibok girls can be rescued. Currently their whereabouts remain unknown. We do not know the state of their health or welfare, or whether they are even still together or alive. As much as I wish to, I cannot promise that we can find them: to do so would be to offer unfounded hope, only to compound the grief if, later, we find we cannot match such expectation. But I say to every parent, family member and friend of the children that my government will do everything in its power to bring them home.", "answer": "Goodluck Jonathan", "sentence": "This lack of reaction was symptomatic of why the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan was swept aside last month \u2014 the first time an incumbent president has been successfully voted out of office in the history of our nation.", "paragraph_sentence": " This lack of reaction was symptomatic of why the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan was swept aside last month \u2014 the first time an incumbent president has been successfully voted out of office in the history of our nation. For too long they ruled, not governed, and in doing so had become so focused on their own self-interest and embroiled in corruption that the duty to react to the anguish suffered by their citizens had become alien to them. My administration, which will take office on May 29, will act differently \u2014 indeed it is the very reason we have been elected. This must begin with honesty as to whether the Chibok girls can be rescued. Currently their whereabouts remain unknown. We do not know the state of their health or welfare, or whether they are even still together or alive. As much as I wish to, I cannot promise that we can find them: to do so would be to offer unfounded hope, only to compound the grief if, later, we find we cannot match such expectation. But I say to every parent, family member and friend of the children that my government will do everything in its power to bring them home.", "paragraph_answer": "This lack of reaction was symptomatic of why the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan was swept aside last month \u2014 the first time an incumbent president has been successfully voted out of office in the history of our nation. For too long they ruled, not governed, and in doing so had become so focused on their own self-interest and embroiled in corruption that the duty to react to the anguish suffered by their citizens had become alien to them. My administration, which will take office on May 29, will act differently \u2014 indeed it is the very reason we have been elected. This must begin with honesty as to whether the Chibok girls can be rescued. Currently their whereabouts remain unknown. We do not know the state of their health or welfare, or whether they are even still together or alive. As much as I wish to, I cannot promise that we can find them: to do so would be to offer unfounded hope, only to compound the grief if, later, we find we cannot match such expectation. But I say to every parent, family member and friend of the children that my government will do everything in its power to bring them home.", "sentence_answer": "This lack of reaction was symptomatic of why the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan was swept aside last month \u2014 the first time an incumbent president has been successfully voted out of office in the history of our nation."} +{"question": "What day does the new administration take office?", "paragraph": "This lack of reaction was symptomatic of why the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan was swept aside last month \u2014 the first time an incumbent president has been successfully voted out of office in the history of our nation. For too long they ruled, not governed, and in doing so had become so focused on their own self-interest and embroiled in corruption that the duty to react to the anguish suffered by their citizens had become alien to them. My administration, which will take office on May 29, will act differently \u2014 indeed it is the very reason we have been elected. This must begin with honesty as to whether the Chibok girls can be rescued. Currently their whereabouts remain unknown. We do not know the state of their health or welfare, or whether they are even still together or alive. As much as I wish to, I cannot promise that we can find them: to do so would be to offer unfounded hope, only to compound the grief if, later, we find we cannot match such expectation. But I say to every parent, family member and friend of the children that my government will do everything in its power to bring them home.", "answer": "May 29", "sentence": "My administration, which will take office on May 29 , will act differently \u2014 indeed it is the very reason we have been elected.", "paragraph_sentence": "This lack of reaction was symptomatic of why the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan was swept aside last month \u2014 the first time an incumbent president has been successfully voted out of office in the history of our nation. For too long they ruled, not governed, and in doing so had become so focused on their own self-interest and embroiled in corruption that the duty to react to the anguish suffered by their citizens had become alien to them. My administration, which will take office on May 29 , will act differently \u2014 indeed it is the very reason we have been elected. This must begin with honesty as to whether the Chibok girls can be rescued. Currently their whereabouts remain unknown. We do not know the state of their health or welfare, or whether they are even still together or alive. As much as I wish to, I cannot promise that we can find them: to do so would be to offer unfounded hope, only to compound the grief if, later, we find we cannot match such expectation. But I say to every parent, family member and friend of the children that my government will do everything in its power to bring them home.", "paragraph_answer": "This lack of reaction was symptomatic of why the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan was swept aside last month \u2014 the first time an incumbent president has been successfully voted out of office in the history of our nation. For too long they ruled, not governed, and in doing so had become so focused on their own self-interest and embroiled in corruption that the duty to react to the anguish suffered by their citizens had become alien to them. My administration, which will take office on May 29 , will act differently \u2014 indeed it is the very reason we have been elected. This must begin with honesty as to whether the Chibok girls can be rescued. Currently their whereabouts remain unknown. We do not know the state of their health or welfare, or whether they are even still together or alive. As much as I wish to, I cannot promise that we can find them: to do so would be to offer unfounded hope, only to compound the grief if, later, we find we cannot match such expectation. But I say to every parent, family member and friend of the children that my government will do everything in its power to bring them home.", "sentence_answer": "My administration, which will take office on May 29 , will act differently \u2014 indeed it is the very reason we have been elected."} +{"question": "What girls are missing?", "paragraph": "This lack of reaction was symptomatic of why the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan was swept aside last month \u2014 the first time an incumbent president has been successfully voted out of office in the history of our nation. For too long they ruled, not governed, and in doing so had become so focused on their own self-interest and embroiled in corruption that the duty to react to the anguish suffered by their citizens had become alien to them. My administration, which will take office on May 29, will act differently \u2014 indeed it is the very reason we have been elected. This must begin with honesty as to whether the Chibok girls can be rescued. Currently their whereabouts remain unknown. We do not know the state of their health or welfare, or whether they are even still together or alive. As much as I wish to, I cannot promise that we can find them: to do so would be to offer unfounded hope, only to compound the grief if, later, we find we cannot match such expectation. But I say to every parent, family member and friend of the children that my government will do everything in its power to bring them home.", "answer": "Chibok girls", "sentence": "This must begin with honesty as to whether the Chibok girls can be rescued.", "paragraph_sentence": "This lack of reaction was symptomatic of why the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan was swept aside last month \u2014 the first time an incumbent president has been successfully voted out of office in the history of our nation. For too long they ruled, not governed, and in doing so had become so focused on their own self-interest and embroiled in corruption that the duty to react to the anguish suffered by their citizens had become alien to them. My administration, which will take office on May 29, will act differently \u2014 indeed it is the very reason we have been elected. This must begin with honesty as to whether the Chibok girls can be rescued. Currently their whereabouts remain unknown. We do not know the state of their health or welfare, or whether they are even still together or alive. As much as I wish to, I cannot promise that we can find them: to do so would be to offer unfounded hope, only to compound the grief if, later, we find we cannot match such expectation. But I say to every parent, family member and friend of the children that my government will do everything in its power to bring them home.", "paragraph_answer": "This lack of reaction was symptomatic of why the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan was swept aside last month \u2014 the first time an incumbent president has been successfully voted out of office in the history of our nation. For too long they ruled, not governed, and in doing so had become so focused on their own self-interest and embroiled in corruption that the duty to react to the anguish suffered by their citizens had become alien to them. My administration, which will take office on May 29, will act differently \u2014 indeed it is the very reason we have been elected. This must begin with honesty as to whether the Chibok girls can be rescued. Currently their whereabouts remain unknown. We do not know the state of their health or welfare, or whether they are even still together or alive. As much as I wish to, I cannot promise that we can find them: to do so would be to offer unfounded hope, only to compound the grief if, later, we find we cannot match such expectation. But I say to every parent, family member and friend of the children that my government will do everything in its power to bring them home.", "sentence_answer": "This must begin with honesty as to whether the Chibok girls can be rescued."} +{"question": "Where are the Chibok girls?", "paragraph": "This lack of reaction was symptomatic of why the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan was swept aside last month \u2014 the first time an incumbent president has been successfully voted out of office in the history of our nation. For too long they ruled, not governed, and in doing so had become so focused on their own self-interest and embroiled in corruption that the duty to react to the anguish suffered by their citizens had become alien to them. My administration, which will take office on May 29, will act differently \u2014 indeed it is the very reason we have been elected. This must begin with honesty as to whether the Chibok girls can be rescued. Currently their whereabouts remain unknown. We do not know the state of their health or welfare, or whether they are even still together or alive. As much as I wish to, I cannot promise that we can find them: to do so would be to offer unfounded hope, only to compound the grief if, later, we find we cannot match such expectation. But I say to every parent, family member and friend of the children that my government will do everything in its power to bring them home.", "answer": "Currently their whereabouts remain unknown", "sentence": "Currently their whereabouts remain unknown .", "paragraph_sentence": "This lack of reaction was symptomatic of why the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan was swept aside last month \u2014 the first time an incumbent president has been successfully voted out of office in the history of our nation. For too long they ruled, not governed, and in doing so had become so focused on their own self-interest and embroiled in corruption that the duty to react to the anguish suffered by their citizens had become alien to them. My administration, which will take office on May 29, will act differently \u2014 indeed it is the very reason we have been elected. This must begin with honesty as to whether the Chibok girls can be rescued. Currently their whereabouts remain unknown . We do not know the state of their health or welfare, or whether they are even still together or alive. As much as I wish to, I cannot promise that we can find them: to do so would be to offer unfounded hope, only to compound the grief if, later, we find we cannot match such expectation. But I say to every parent, family member and friend of the children that my government will do everything in its power to bring them home.", "paragraph_answer": "This lack of reaction was symptomatic of why the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan was swept aside last month \u2014 the first time an incumbent president has been successfully voted out of office in the history of our nation. For too long they ruled, not governed, and in doing so had become so focused on their own self-interest and embroiled in corruption that the duty to react to the anguish suffered by their citizens had become alien to them. My administration, which will take office on May 29, will act differently \u2014 indeed it is the very reason we have been elected. This must begin with honesty as to whether the Chibok girls can be rescued. Currently their whereabouts remain unknown . We do not know the state of their health or welfare, or whether they are even still together or alive. As much as I wish to, I cannot promise that we can find them: to do so would be to offer unfounded hope, only to compound the grief if, later, we find we cannot match such expectation. But I say to every parent, family member and friend of the children that my government will do everything in its power to bring them home.", "sentence_answer": " Currently their whereabouts remain unknown ."} +{"question": "Who is joining Boko Haram?", "paragraph": "But as our military pushes Boko Haram back, as it will, we must be ready to focus on what else must be done to counter the terrorists. We must address why it is that young people join Boko Haram. There are many reasons why vulnerable young people join militant groups, but among them are poverty and ignorance. Indeed Boko Haram \u2014 which translates in English, roughly, as \u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d \u2014 preys on the perverted belief that the opportunities that education brings are sinful. If you are starving and young, and in search of answers as to why your life is so difficult, fundamentalism can be alluring. We know this for a fact because former members of Boko Haram have admitted it: They offer impressionable young people money and the promise of food, while the group\u2019s mentors twist their minds with fanaticism.", "answer": "young people", "sentence": "We must address why it is that young people join Boko Haram.", "paragraph_sentence": "But as our military pushes Boko Haram back, as it will, we must be ready to focus on what else must be done to counter the terrorists. We must address why it is that young people join Boko Haram. There are many reasons why vulnerable young people join militant groups, but among them are poverty and ignorance. Indeed Boko Haram \u2014 which translates in English, roughly, as \u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d \u2014 preys on the perverted belief that the opportunities that education brings are sinful. If you are starving and young, and in search of answers as to why your life is so difficult, fundamentalism can be alluring. We know this for a fact because former members of Boko Haram have admitted it: They offer impressionable young people money and the promise of food, while the group\u2019s mentors twist their minds with fanaticism.", "paragraph_answer": "But as our military pushes Boko Haram back, as it will, we must be ready to focus on what else must be done to counter the terrorists. We must address why it is that young people join Boko Haram. There are many reasons why vulnerable young people join militant groups, but among them are poverty and ignorance. Indeed Boko Haram \u2014 which translates in English, roughly, as \u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d \u2014 preys on the perverted belief that the opportunities that education brings are sinful. If you are starving and young, and in search of answers as to why your life is so difficult, fundamentalism can be alluring. We know this for a fact because former members of Boko Haram have admitted it: They offer impressionable young people money and the promise of food, while the group\u2019s mentors twist their minds with fanaticism.", "sentence_answer": "We must address why it is that young people join Boko Haram."} +{"question": "Why are young people joining Boko Haram?", "paragraph": "But as our military pushes Boko Haram back, as it will, we must be ready to focus on what else must be done to counter the terrorists. We must address why it is that young people join Boko Haram. There are many reasons why vulnerable young people join militant groups, but among them are poverty and ignorance. Indeed Boko Haram \u2014 which translates in English, roughly, as \u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d \u2014 preys on the perverted belief that the opportunities that education brings are sinful. If you are starving and young, and in search of answers as to why your life is so difficult, fundamentalism can be alluring. We know this for a fact because former members of Boko Haram have admitted it: They offer impressionable young people money and the promise of food, while the group\u2019s mentors twist their minds with fanaticism.", "answer": "poverty and ignorance", "sentence": "There are many reasons why vulnerable young people join militant groups, but among them are poverty and ignorance .", "paragraph_sentence": "But as our military pushes Boko Haram back, as it will, we must be ready to focus on what else must be done to counter the terrorists. We must address why it is that young people join Boko Haram. There are many reasons why vulnerable young people join militant groups, but among them are poverty and ignorance . Indeed Boko Haram \u2014 which translates in English, roughly, as \u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d \u2014 preys on the perverted belief that the opportunities that education brings are sinful. If you are starving and young, and in search of answers as to why your life is so difficult, fundamentalism can be alluring. We know this for a fact because former members of Boko Haram have admitted it: They offer impressionable young people money and the promise of food, while the group\u2019s mentors twist their minds with fanaticism.", "paragraph_answer": "But as our military pushes Boko Haram back, as it will, we must be ready to focus on what else must be done to counter the terrorists. We must address why it is that young people join Boko Haram. There are many reasons why vulnerable young people join militant groups, but among them are poverty and ignorance . Indeed Boko Haram \u2014 which translates in English, roughly, as \u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d \u2014 preys on the perverted belief that the opportunities that education brings are sinful. If you are starving and young, and in search of answers as to why your life is so difficult, fundamentalism can be alluring. We know this for a fact because former members of Boko Haram have admitted it: They offer impressionable young people money and the promise of food, while the group\u2019s mentors twist their minds with fanaticism.", "sentence_answer": "There are many reasons why vulnerable young people join militant groups, but among them are poverty and ignorance ."} +{"question": "What does Boko Haram mean in English?", "paragraph": "But as our military pushes Boko Haram back, as it will, we must be ready to focus on what else must be done to counter the terrorists. We must address why it is that young people join Boko Haram. There are many reasons why vulnerable young people join militant groups, but among them are poverty and ignorance. Indeed Boko Haram \u2014 which translates in English, roughly, as \u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d \u2014 preys on the perverted belief that the opportunities that education brings are sinful. If you are starving and young, and in search of answers as to why your life is so difficult, fundamentalism can be alluring. We know this for a fact because former members of Boko Haram have admitted it: They offer impressionable young people money and the promise of food, while the group\u2019s mentors twist their minds with fanaticism.", "answer": "\u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d", "sentence": "Indeed Boko Haram \u2014 which translates in English, roughly, as \u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d \u2014 preys on the perverted belief that the opportunities that education brings are sinful.", "paragraph_sentence": "But as our military pushes Boko Haram back, as it will, we must be ready to focus on what else must be done to counter the terrorists. We must address why it is that young people join Boko Haram. There are many reasons why vulnerable young people join militant groups, but among them are poverty and ignorance. Indeed Boko Haram \u2014 which translates in English, roughly, as \u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d \u2014 preys on the perverted belief that the opportunities that education brings are sinful. If you are starving and young, and in search of answers as to why your life is so difficult, fundamentalism can be alluring. We know this for a fact because former members of Boko Haram have admitted it: They offer impressionable young people money and the promise of food, while the group\u2019s mentors twist their minds with fanaticism.", "paragraph_answer": "But as our military pushes Boko Haram back, as it will, we must be ready to focus on what else must be done to counter the terrorists. We must address why it is that young people join Boko Haram. There are many reasons why vulnerable young people join militant groups, but among them are poverty and ignorance. Indeed Boko Haram \u2014 which translates in English, roughly, as \u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d \u2014 preys on the perverted belief that the opportunities that education brings are sinful. If you are starving and young, and in search of answers as to why your life is so difficult, fundamentalism can be alluring. We know this for a fact because former members of Boko Haram have admitted it: They offer impressionable young people money and the promise of food, while the group\u2019s mentors twist their minds with fanaticism.", "sentence_answer": "Indeed Boko Haram \u2014 which translates in English, roughly, as \u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d \u2014 preys on the perverted belief that the opportunities that education brings are sinful."} +{"question": "What do members of Boko Haram promise young people?", "paragraph": "But as our military pushes Boko Haram back, as it will, we must be ready to focus on what else must be done to counter the terrorists. We must address why it is that young people join Boko Haram. There are many reasons why vulnerable young people join militant groups, but among them are poverty and ignorance. Indeed Boko Haram \u2014 which translates in English, roughly, as \u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d \u2014 preys on the perverted belief that the opportunities that education brings are sinful. If you are starving and young, and in search of answers as to why your life is so difficult, fundamentalism can be alluring. We know this for a fact because former members of Boko Haram have admitted it: They offer impressionable young people money and the promise of food, while the group\u2019s mentors twist their minds with fanaticism.", "answer": "money", "sentence": "We know this for a fact because former members of Boko Haram have admitted it: They offer impressionable young people money and the promise of food, while the group\u2019s mentors twist their minds with fanaticism.", "paragraph_sentence": "But as our military pushes Boko Haram back, as it will, we must be ready to focus on what else must be done to counter the terrorists. We must address why it is that young people join Boko Haram. There are many reasons why vulnerable young people join militant groups, but among them are poverty and ignorance. Indeed Boko Haram \u2014 which translates in English, roughly, as \u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d \u2014 preys on the perverted belief that the opportunities that education brings are sinful. If you are starving and young, and in search of answers as to why your life is so difficult, fundamentalism can be alluring. We know this for a fact because former members of Boko Haram have admitted it: They offer impressionable young people money and the promise of food, while the group\u2019s mentors twist their minds with fanaticism. ", "paragraph_answer": "But as our military pushes Boko Haram back, as it will, we must be ready to focus on what else must be done to counter the terrorists. We must address why it is that young people join Boko Haram. There are many reasons why vulnerable young people join militant groups, but among them are poverty and ignorance. Indeed Boko Haram \u2014 which translates in English, roughly, as \u201cWestern Education Is Sinful\u201d \u2014 preys on the perverted belief that the opportunities that education brings are sinful. If you are starving and young, and in search of answers as to why your life is so difficult, fundamentalism can be alluring. We know this for a fact because former members of Boko Haram have admitted it: They offer impressionable young people money and the promise of food, while the group\u2019s mentors twist their minds with fanaticism.", "sentence_answer": "We know this for a fact because former members of Boko Haram have admitted it: They offer impressionable young people money and the promise of food, while the group\u2019s mentors twist their minds with fanaticism."} +{"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."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What countries are African allies?", "paragraph": "That is why the answer to defeating Boko Haram begins and ends with Nigeria. That is not to say that allies cannot help us. My administration would welcome the resumption of a military training agreement with the United States, which was halted during the previous administration. We must, of course, have better coordination with the military campaigns our African allies, like Chad and Niger, are waging in the struggle against Boko Haram. But, in the end, the answer to this threat must come from within Nigeria.", "answer": "Chad and Niger", "sentence": "We must, of course, have better coordination with the military campaigns our African allies, like Chad and Niger , are waging in the struggle against Boko Haram.", "paragraph_sentence": "That is why the answer to defeating Boko Haram begins and ends with Nigeria. That is not to say that allies cannot help us. My administration would welcome the resumption of a military training agreement with the United States, which was halted during the previous administration. We must, of course, have better coordination with the military campaigns our African allies, like Chad and Niger , are waging in the struggle against Boko Haram. But, in the end, the answer to this threat must come from within Nigeria.", "paragraph_answer": "That is why the answer to defeating Boko Haram begins and ends with Nigeria. That is not to say that allies cannot help us. My administration would welcome the resumption of a military training agreement with the United States, which was halted during the previous administration. We must, of course, have better coordination with the military campaigns our African allies, like Chad and Niger , are waging in the struggle against Boko Haram. But, in the end, the answer to this threat must come from within Nigeria.", "sentence_answer": "We must, of course, have better coordination with the military campaigns our African allies, like Chad and Niger , are waging in the struggle against Boko Haram."} +{"question": "Who ended the military agreement with the United States?", "paragraph": "That is why the answer to defeating Boko Haram begins and ends with Nigeria. That is not to say that allies cannot help us. My administration would welcome the resumption of a military training agreement with the United States, which was halted during the previous administration. We must, of course, have better coordination with the military campaigns our African allies, like Chad and Niger, are waging in the struggle against Boko Haram. But, in the end, the answer to this threat must come from within Nigeria.", "answer": "the previous administration", "sentence": "My administration would welcome the resumption of a military training agreement with the United States, which was halted during the previous administration .", "paragraph_sentence": "That is why the answer to defeating Boko Haram begins and ends with Nigeria. That is not to say that allies cannot help us. My administration would welcome the resumption of a military training agreement with the United States, which was halted during the previous administration . We must, of course, have better coordination with the military campaigns our African allies, like Chad and Niger, are waging in the struggle against Boko Haram. But, in the end, the answer to this threat must come from within Nigeria.", "paragraph_answer": "That is why the answer to defeating Boko Haram begins and ends with Nigeria. That is not to say that allies cannot help us. My administration would welcome the resumption of a military training agreement with the United States, which was halted during the previous administration . We must, of course, have better coordination with the military campaigns our African allies, like Chad and Niger, are waging in the struggle against Boko Haram. But, in the end, the answer to this threat must come from within Nigeria.", "sentence_answer": "My administration would welcome the resumption of a military training agreement with the United States, which was halted during the previous administration ."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What country is Boko Haram affecting?", "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": "Nigeria", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "What day will the new president begin fighting Boko Haram?", "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": "the first day of my administration", "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."} +{"question": "Who let Boko Haram operate in Nigerian territory?", "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": "the outgoing government", "sentence": "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_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": "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."} +{"question": "What company did the Administration create new oversight rules for?", "paragraph": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "answer": "Corinthian Colleges", "sentence": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "sentence_answer": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations."} +{"question": "When did the Corinthian Colleges collapse?", "paragraph": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "answer": "last year", "sentence": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "sentence_answer": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations."} +{"question": "Which adminstration created new oversight rules", "paragraph": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "answer": "Obama administration", "sentence": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "sentence_answer": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations."} +{"question": "What is corinthian college?", "paragraph": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "answer": "for-profit colleges and trade schools", "sentence": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "sentence_answer": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations."} +{"question": "What company did the Administration create new oversight rules for?", "paragraph": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "answer": "Corinthian Colleges", "sentence": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "sentence_answer": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations."} +{"question": "What is corinthian college?", "paragraph": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "answer": "for-profit colleges and trade schools", "sentence": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "sentence_answer": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations."} +{"question": "When did the Corinthian Colleges collapse?", "paragraph": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "answer": "last year", "sentence": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "sentence_answer": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations."} +{"question": "Which adminstration created new oversight rules", "paragraph": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "answer": "Obama administration", "sentence": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations.", "sentence_answer": "The Obama administration took an important step in the right direction when it created new oversight rules for the industry and stepped up its investigations into companies like Corinthian Colleges \u2014 one of the largest operators of for-profit colleges and trade schools in the country until it collapsed last year amid state and federal lawsuits and fraud investigations."} +{"question": "Which college is involeved in fruad?", "paragraph": "With abundant evidence of fraud available at both the federal and state levels, it\u2019s perplexing that the federal government has not promptly granted loan forgiveness for at least some of the people with complaints involving fraud. The Education Department says that the Heald College claims will be decided in November, because the government has made a clear finding of misconduct by the school. The remaining claims, it says, will be decided as swiftly and fairly as possible. The risk is that the department\u2019s legendary bureaucracy will drag its feet and make it difficult for deserving plaintiffs to get relief. In addition, the department needs to do a much better job of reaching out to people who have potential claims. It has promised to build its cases on evidence already assembled by state attorneys general, which should speed the process. When evidence of widespread fraud is uncovered, the department should give broad relief to all the damaged parties.", "answer": "Heald College", "sentence": "The Education Department says that the Heald College claims will be decided in November, because the government has made a clear finding of misconduct by the school.", "paragraph_sentence": "With abundant evidence of fraud available at both the federal and state levels, it\u2019s perplexing that the federal government has not promptly granted loan forgiveness for at least some of the people with complaints involving fraud. The Education Department says that the Heald College claims will be decided in November, because the government has made a clear finding of misconduct by the school. The remaining claims, it says, will be decided as swiftly and fairly as possible. The risk is that the department\u2019s legendary bureaucracy will drag its feet and make it difficult for deserving plaintiffs to get relief. In addition, the department needs to do a much better job of reaching out to people who have potential claims. It has promised to build its cases on evidence already assembled by state attorneys general, which should speed the process. When evidence of widespread fraud is uncovered, the department should give broad relief to all the damaged parties.", "paragraph_answer": "With abundant evidence of fraud available at both the federal and state levels, it\u2019s perplexing that the federal government has not promptly granted loan forgiveness for at least some of the people with complaints involving fraud. The Education Department says that the Heald College claims will be decided in November, because the government has made a clear finding of misconduct by the school. The remaining claims, it says, will be decided as swiftly and fairly as possible. The risk is that the department\u2019s legendary bureaucracy will drag its feet and make it difficult for deserving plaintiffs to get relief. In addition, the department needs to do a much better job of reaching out to people who have potential claims. It has promised to build its cases on evidence already assembled by state attorneys general, which should speed the process. When evidence of widespread fraud is uncovered, the department should give broad relief to all the damaged parties.", "sentence_answer": "The Education Department says that the Heald College claims will be decided in November, because the government has made a clear finding of misconduct by the school."} +{"question": "when will the claim be decided?", "paragraph": "With abundant evidence of fraud available at both the federal and state levels, it\u2019s perplexing that the federal government has not promptly granted loan forgiveness for at least some of the people with complaints involving fraud. The Education Department says that the Heald College claims will be decided in November, because the government has made a clear finding of misconduct by the school. The remaining claims, it says, will be decided as swiftly and fairly as possible. The risk is that the department\u2019s legendary bureaucracy will drag its feet and make it difficult for deserving plaintiffs to get relief. In addition, the department needs to do a much better job of reaching out to people who have potential claims. It has promised to build its cases on evidence already assembled by state attorneys general, which should speed the process. When evidence of widespread fraud is uncovered, the department should give broad relief to all the damaged parties.", "answer": "November", "sentence": "The Education Department says that the Heald College claims will be decided in November , because the government has made a clear finding of misconduct by the school", "paragraph_sentence": "With abundant evidence of fraud available at both the federal and state levels, it\u2019s perplexing that the federal government has not promptly granted loan forgiveness for at least some of the people with complaints involving fraud. The Education Department says that the Heald College claims will be decided in November , because the government has made a clear finding of misconduct by the school . The remaining claims, it says, will be decided as swiftly and fairly as possible. The risk is that the department\u2019s legendary bureaucracy will drag its feet and make it difficult for deserving plaintiffs to get relief. In addition, the department needs to do a much better job of reaching out to people who have potential claims. It has promised to build its cases on evidence already assembled by state attorneys general, which should speed the process. When evidence of widespread fraud is uncovered, the department should give broad relief to all the damaged parties.", "paragraph_answer": "With abundant evidence of fraud available at both the federal and state levels, it\u2019s perplexing that the federal government has not promptly granted loan forgiveness for at least some of the people with complaints involving fraud. The Education Department says that the Heald College claims will be decided in November , because the government has made a clear finding of misconduct by the school. The remaining claims, it says, will be decided as swiftly and fairly as possible. The risk is that the department\u2019s legendary bureaucracy will drag its feet and make it difficult for deserving plaintiffs to get relief. In addition, the department needs to do a much better job of reaching out to people who have potential claims. It has promised to build its cases on evidence already assembled by state attorneys general, which should speed the process. When evidence of widespread fraud is uncovered, the department should give broad relief to all the damaged parties.", "sentence_answer": "The Education Department says that the Heald College claims will be decided in November , because the government has made a clear finding of misconduct by the school"} +{"question": "what is the risk of the case?", "paragraph": "With abundant evidence of fraud available at both the federal and state levels, it\u2019s perplexing that the federal government has not promptly granted loan forgiveness for at least some of the people with complaints involving fraud. The Education Department says that the Heald College claims will be decided in November, because the government has made a clear finding of misconduct by the school. The remaining claims, it says, will be decided as swiftly and fairly as possible. The risk is that the department\u2019s legendary bureaucracy will drag its feet and make it difficult for deserving plaintiffs to get relief. In addition, the department needs to do a much better job of reaching out to people who have potential claims. It has promised to build its cases on evidence already assembled by state attorneys general, which should speed the process. When evidence of widespread fraud is uncovered, the department should give broad relief to all the damaged parties.", "answer": "the department\u2019s legendary bureaucracy will drag its feet", "sentence": "The risk is that the department\u2019s legendary bureaucracy will drag its feet and make it difficult for deserving plaintiffs to get relief.", "paragraph_sentence": "With abundant evidence of fraud available at both the federal and state levels, it\u2019s perplexing that the federal government has not promptly granted loan forgiveness for at least some of the people with complaints involving fraud. The Education Department says that the Heald College claims will be decided in November, because the government has made a clear finding of misconduct by the school. The remaining claims, it says, will be decided as swiftly and fairly as possible. The risk is that the department\u2019s legendary bureaucracy will drag its feet and make it difficult for deserving plaintiffs to get relief. In addition, the department needs to do a much better job of reaching out to people who have potential claims. It has promised to build its cases on evidence already assembled by state attorneys general, which should speed the process. When evidence of widespread fraud is uncovered, the department should give broad relief to all the damaged parties.", "paragraph_answer": "With abundant evidence of fraud available at both the federal and state levels, it\u2019s perplexing that the federal government has not promptly granted loan forgiveness for at least some of the people with complaints involving fraud. The Education Department says that the Heald College claims will be decided in November, because the government has made a clear finding of misconduct by the school. The remaining claims, it says, will be decided as swiftly and fairly as possible. The risk is that the department\u2019s legendary bureaucracy will drag its feet and make it difficult for deserving plaintiffs to get relief. In addition, the department needs to do a much better job of reaching out to people who have potential claims. It has promised to build its cases on evidence already assembled by state attorneys general, which should speed the process. When evidence of widespread fraud is uncovered, the department should give broad relief to all the damaged parties.", "sentence_answer": "The risk is that the department\u2019s legendary bureaucracy will drag its feet and make it difficult for deserving plaintiffs to get relief."} +{"question": "Who is assembling he case?", "paragraph": "With abundant evidence of fraud available at both the federal and state levels, it\u2019s perplexing that the federal government has not promptly granted loan forgiveness for at least some of the people with complaints involving fraud. The Education Department says that the Heald College claims will be decided in November, because the government has made a clear finding of misconduct by the school. The remaining claims, it says, will be decided as swiftly and fairly as possible. The risk is that the department\u2019s legendary bureaucracy will drag its feet and make it difficult for deserving plaintiffs to get relief. In addition, the department needs to do a much better job of reaching out to people who have potential claims. It has promised to build its cases on evidence already assembled by state attorneys general, which should speed the process. When evidence of widespread fraud is uncovered, the department should give broad relief to all the damaged parties.", "answer": "state attorneys general", "sentence": "It has promised to build its cases on evidence already assembled by state attorneys general , which should speed the process.", "paragraph_sentence": "With abundant evidence of fraud available at both the federal and state levels, it\u2019s perplexing that the federal government has not promptly granted loan forgiveness for at least some of the people with complaints involving fraud. The Education Department says that the Heald College claims will be decided in November, because the government has made a clear finding of misconduct by the school. The remaining claims, it says, will be decided as swiftly and fairly as possible. The risk is that the department\u2019s legendary bureaucracy will drag its feet and make it difficult for deserving plaintiffs to get relief. In addition, the department needs to do a much better job of reaching out to people who have potential claims. It has promised to build its cases on evidence already assembled by state attorneys general , which should speed the process. When evidence of widespread fraud is uncovered, the department should give broad relief to all the damaged parties.", "paragraph_answer": "With abundant evidence of fraud available at both the federal and state levels, it\u2019s perplexing that the federal government has not promptly granted loan forgiveness for at least some of the people with complaints involving fraud. The Education Department says that the Heald College claims will be decided in November, because the government has made a clear finding of misconduct by the school. The remaining claims, it says, will be decided as swiftly and fairly as possible. The risk is that the department\u2019s legendary bureaucracy will drag its feet and make it difficult for deserving plaintiffs to get relief. In addition, the department needs to do a much better job of reaching out to people who have potential claims. It has promised to build its cases on evidence already assembled by state attorneys general , which should speed the process. When evidence of widespread fraud is uncovered, the department should give broad relief to all the damaged parties.", "sentence_answer": "It has promised to build its cases on evidence already assembled by state attorneys general , which should speed the process."} +{"question": "What is the name of the conductor?", "paragraph": "ESA-PEKKA SALONEN, conductor and composer: Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements. At least I was. And Boulez was like a black-and-white statement machine. He said, \u201cThis is wrong, and this is right.\u201d The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical. Like the famous one from the \u201950s: \u201cIf a composer has not experienced the necessity of dodecaphonic technique, he is useless.\u201d That\u2019s a good sentence because it tells you what is what. It takes the guessing out of the equation.", "answer": "ESA-PEKKA SALONEN", "sentence": "ESA-PEKKA SALONEN , conductor and composer: Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements.", "paragraph_sentence": " ESA-PEKKA SALONEN , conductor and composer: Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements. At least I was. And Boulez was like a black-and-white statement machine. He said, \u201cThis is wrong, and this is right.\u201d The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical. Like the famous one from the \u201950s: \u201cIf a composer has not experienced the necessity of dodecaphonic technique, he is useless.\u201d That\u2019s a good sentence because it tells you what is what. It takes the guessing out of the equation.", "paragraph_answer": " ESA-PEKKA SALONEN , conductor and composer: Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements. At least I was. And Boulez was like a black-and-white statement machine. He said, \u201cThis is wrong, and this is right.\u201d The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical. Like the famous one from the \u201950s: \u201cIf a composer has not experienced the necessity of dodecaphonic technique, he is useless.\u201d That\u2019s a good sentence because it tells you what is what. It takes the guessing out of the equation.", "sentence_answer": " ESA-PEKKA SALONEN , conductor and composer: Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements."} +{"question": "The statements that Boulez made were what?", "paragraph": "ESA-PEKKA SALONEN, conductor and composer: Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements. At least I was. And Boulez was like a black-and-white statement machine. He said, \u201cThis is wrong, and this is right.\u201d The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical. Like the famous one from the \u201950s: \u201cIf a composer has not experienced the necessity of dodecaphonic technique, he is useless.\u201d That\u2019s a good sentence because it tells you what is what. It takes the guessing out of the equation.", "answer": "refreshingly categorical", "sentence": "The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical .", "paragraph_sentence": "ESA-PEKKA SALONEN, conductor and composer: Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements. At least I was. And Boulez was like a black-and-white statement machine. He said, \u201cThis is wrong, and this is right.\u201d The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical . Like the famous one from the \u201950s: \u201cIf a composer has not experienced the necessity of dodecaphonic technique, he is useless.\u201d That\u2019s a good sentence because it tells you what is what. It takes the guessing out of the equation.", "paragraph_answer": "ESA-PEKKA SALONEN, conductor and composer: Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements. At least I was. And Boulez was like a black-and-white statement machine. He said, \u201cThis is wrong, and this is right.\u201d The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical . Like the famous one from the \u201950s: \u201cIf a composer has not experienced the necessity of dodecaphonic technique, he is useless.\u201d That\u2019s a good sentence because it tells you what is what. It takes the guessing out of the equation.", "sentence_answer": "The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical ."} +{"question": "What are young people attracted to?", "paragraph": "ESA-PEKKA SALONEN, conductor and composer: Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements. At least I was. And Boulez was like a black-and-white statement machine. He said, \u201cThis is wrong, and this is right.\u201d The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical. Like the famous one from the \u201950s: \u201cIf a composer has not experienced the necessity of dodecaphonic technique, he is useless.\u201d That\u2019s a good sentence because it tells you what is what. It takes the guessing out of the equation.", "answer": "black-and-white statements", "sentence": "Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements .", "paragraph_sentence": "ESA-PEKKA SALONEN, conductor and composer: Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements . At least I was. And Boulez was like a black-and-white statement machine. He said, \u201cThis is wrong, and this is right.\u201d The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical. Like the famous one from the \u201950s: \u201cIf a composer has not experienced the necessity of dodecaphonic technique, he is useless.\u201d That\u2019s a good sentence because it tells you what is what. It takes the guessing out of the equation.", "paragraph_answer": "ESA-PEKKA SALONEN, conductor and composer: Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements . At least I was. And Boulez was like a black-and-white statement machine. He said, \u201cThis is wrong, and this is right.\u201d The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical. Like the famous one from the \u201950s: \u201cIf a composer has not experienced the necessity of dodecaphonic technique, he is useless.\u201d That\u2019s a good sentence because it tells you what is what. It takes the guessing out of the equation.", "sentence_answer": "Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements ."} +{"question": "A composer is useless of he has not experienced what technique?", "paragraph": "ESA-PEKKA SALONEN, conductor and composer: Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements. At least I was. And Boulez was like a black-and-white statement machine. He said, \u201cThis is wrong, and this is right.\u201d The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical. Like the famous one from the \u201950s: \u201cIf a composer has not experienced the necessity of dodecaphonic technique, he is useless.\u201d That\u2019s a good sentence because it tells you what is what. It takes the guessing out of the equation.", "answer": "dodecaphonic", "sentence": "Like the famous one from the \u201950s: \u201cIf a composer has not experienced the necessity of dodecaphonic technique, he is useless.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "ESA-PEKKA SALONEN, conductor and composer: Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements. At least I was. And Boulez was like a black-and-white statement machine. He said, \u201cThis is wrong, and this is right.\u201d The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical. Like the famous one from the \u201950s: \u201cIf a composer has not experienced the necessity of dodecaphonic technique, he is useless.\u201d That\u2019s a good sentence because it tells you what is what. It takes the guessing out of the equation.", "paragraph_answer": "ESA-PEKKA SALONEN, conductor and composer: Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements. At least I was. And Boulez was like a black-and-white statement machine. He said, \u201cThis is wrong, and this is right.\u201d The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical. Like the famous one from the \u201950s: \u201cIf a composer has not experienced the necessity of dodecaphonic technique, he is useless.\u201d That\u2019s a good sentence because it tells you what is what. It takes the guessing out of the equation.", "sentence_answer": "Like the famous one from the \u201950s: \u201cIf a composer has not experienced the necessity of dodecaphonic technique, he is useless.\u201d"} +{"question": "Essa-Pekka Salonen is what?", "paragraph": "ESA-PEKKA SALONEN, conductor and composer: Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements. At least I was. And Boulez was like a black-and-white statement machine. He said, \u201cThis is wrong, and this is right.\u201d The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical. Like the famous one from the \u201950s: \u201cIf a composer has not experienced the necessity of dodecaphonic technique, he is useless.\u201d That\u2019s a good sentence because it tells you what is what. It takes the guessing out of the equation.", "answer": "conductor and composer", "sentence": "ESA-PEKKA SALONEN, conductor and composer : Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements.", "paragraph_sentence": " ESA-PEKKA SALONEN, conductor and composer : Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements. At least I was. And Boulez was like a black-and-white statement machine. He said, \u201cThis is wrong, and this is right.\u201d The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical. Like the famous one from the \u201950s: \u201cIf a composer has not experienced the necessity of dodecaphonic technique, he is useless.\u201d That\u2019s a good sentence because it tells you what is what. It takes the guessing out of the equation.", "paragraph_answer": "ESA-PEKKA SALONEN, conductor and composer : Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements. At least I was. And Boulez was like a black-and-white statement machine. He said, \u201cThis is wrong, and this is right.\u201d The statements Boulez made were kind of refreshingly categorical. Like the famous one from the \u201950s: \u201cIf a composer has not experienced the necessity of dodecaphonic technique, he is useless.\u201d That\u2019s a good sentence because it tells you what is what. It takes the guessing out of the equation.", "sentence_answer": "ESA-PEKKA SALONEN, conductor and composer : Young people are attracted to black-and-white statements."} +{"question": "When did Cheung get to know Salonen?", "paragraph": "ANTHONY CHEUNG, composer and pianist: I don\u2019t immediately prostrate myself at his altar. It\u2019s an ambivalent relationship. But as far as respect for him as a musician and what he\u2019s done, I have infinite respect. He\u2019s an enormous influence on how recent composers have dealt with instrumental groups. SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain. And it was the closest to Louis XIV I ever saw in my life. It was impressive and scary for a young person, but mostly impressive. I still think, if someone had to have that kind of power, why not him? AS A PIANO MASTER PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD, pianist: The piano was his instrument, so he could experiment directly on it. In the \u201cNotations,\u201d we see a young composer, still a student, who composed a set of miniatures. And in many of them, we recognize what will become landmark gestures of Boulez, the basis of his language: violent lightenings illuminating the whole space of the instrument, permanently varied arpeggi, short unexpected gestures going in any direction.", "answer": "early \u201980s", "sentence": "SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain.", "paragraph_sentence": "ANTHONY CHEUNG, composer and pianist: I don\u2019t immediately prostrate myself at his altar. It\u2019s an ambivalent relationship. But as far as respect for him as a musician and what he\u2019s done, I have infinite respect. He\u2019s an enormous influence on how recent composers have dealt with instrumental groups. SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain. And it was the closest to Louis XIV I ever saw in my life. It was impressive and scary for a young person, but mostly impressive. I still think, if someone had to have that kind of power, why not him? AS A PIANO MASTER PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD, pianist: The piano was his instrument, so he could experiment directly on it. In the \u201cNotations,\u201d we see a young composer, still a student, who composed a set of miniatures. And in many of them, we recognize what will become landmark gestures of Boulez, the basis of his language: violent lightenings illuminating the whole space of the instrument, permanently varied arpeggi, short unexpected gestures going in any direction.", "paragraph_answer": "ANTHONY CHEUNG, composer and pianist: I don\u2019t immediately prostrate myself at his altar. It\u2019s an ambivalent relationship. But as far as respect for him as a musician and what he\u2019s done, I have infinite respect. He\u2019s an enormous influence on how recent composers have dealt with instrumental groups. SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain. And it was the closest to Louis XIV I ever saw in my life. It was impressive and scary for a young person, but mostly impressive. I still think, if someone had to have that kind of power, why not him? AS A PIANO MASTER PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD, pianist: The piano was his instrument, so he could experiment directly on it. In the \u201cNotations,\u201d we see a young composer, still a student, who composed a set of miniatures. And in many of them, we recognize what will become landmark gestures of Boulez, the basis of his language: violent lightenings illuminating the whole space of the instrument, permanently varied arpeggi, short unexpected gestures going in any direction.", "sentence_answer": "SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain."} +{"question": "Where did Cheung work in the 80's?", "paragraph": "ANTHONY CHEUNG, composer and pianist: I don\u2019t immediately prostrate myself at his altar. It\u2019s an ambivalent relationship. But as far as respect for him as a musician and what he\u2019s done, I have infinite respect. He\u2019s an enormous influence on how recent composers have dealt with instrumental groups. SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain. And it was the closest to Louis XIV I ever saw in my life. It was impressive and scary for a young person, but mostly impressive. I still think, if someone had to have that kind of power, why not him? AS A PIANO MASTER PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD, pianist: The piano was his instrument, so he could experiment directly on it. In the \u201cNotations,\u201d we see a young composer, still a student, who composed a set of miniatures. And in many of them, we recognize what will become landmark gestures of Boulez, the basis of his language: violent lightenings illuminating the whole space of the instrument, permanently varied arpeggi, short unexpected gestures going in any direction.", "answer": "IRCAM", "sentence": "SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain.", "paragraph_sentence": "ANTHONY CHEUNG, composer and pianist: I don\u2019t immediately prostrate myself at his altar. It\u2019s an ambivalent relationship. But as far as respect for him as a musician and what he\u2019s done, I have infinite respect. He\u2019s an enormous influence on how recent composers have dealt with instrumental groups. SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain. And it was the closest to Louis XIV I ever saw in my life. It was impressive and scary for a young person, but mostly impressive. I still think, if someone had to have that kind of power, why not him? AS A PIANO MASTER PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD, pianist: The piano was his instrument, so he could experiment directly on it. In the \u201cNotations,\u201d we see a young composer, still a student, who composed a set of miniatures. And in many of them, we recognize what will become landmark gestures of Boulez, the basis of his language: violent lightenings illuminating the whole space of the instrument, permanently varied arpeggi, short unexpected gestures going in any direction.", "paragraph_answer": "ANTHONY CHEUNG, composer and pianist: I don\u2019t immediately prostrate myself at his altar. It\u2019s an ambivalent relationship. But as far as respect for him as a musician and what he\u2019s done, I have infinite respect. He\u2019s an enormous influence on how recent composers have dealt with instrumental groups. SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain. And it was the closest to Louis XIV I ever saw in my life. It was impressive and scary for a young person, but mostly impressive. I still think, if someone had to have that kind of power, why not him? AS A PIANO MASTER PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD, pianist: The piano was his instrument, so he could experiment directly on it. In the \u201cNotations,\u201d we see a young composer, still a student, who composed a set of miniatures. And in many of them, we recognize what will become landmark gestures of Boulez, the basis of his language: violent lightenings illuminating the whole space of the instrument, permanently varied arpeggi, short unexpected gestures going in any direction.", "sentence_answer": "SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain."} +{"question": "Pierre Laurent Aimarf is a what?", "paragraph": "ANTHONY CHEUNG, composer and pianist: I don\u2019t immediately prostrate myself at his altar. It\u2019s an ambivalent relationship. But as far as respect for him as a musician and what he\u2019s done, I have infinite respect. He\u2019s an enormous influence on how recent composers have dealt with instrumental groups. SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain. And it was the closest to Louis XIV I ever saw in my life. It was impressive and scary for a young person, but mostly impressive. I still think, if someone had to have that kind of power, why not him? AS A PIANO MASTER PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD, pianist: The piano was his instrument, so he could experiment directly on it. In the \u201cNotations,\u201d we see a young composer, still a student, who composed a set of miniatures. And in many of them, we recognize what will become landmark gestures of Boulez, the basis of his language: violent lightenings illuminating the whole space of the instrument, permanently varied arpeggi, short unexpected gestures going in any direction.", "answer": "pianist", "sentence": "ANTHONY CHEUNG, composer and pianist : I don\u2019t immediately prostrate myself at his altar.", "paragraph_sentence": " ANTHONY CHEUNG, composer and pianist : I don\u2019t immediately prostrate myself at his altar. It\u2019s an ambivalent relationship. But as far as respect for him as a musician and what he\u2019s done, I have infinite respect. He\u2019s an enormous influence on how recent composers have dealt with instrumental groups. SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain. And it was the closest to Louis XIV I ever saw in my life. It was impressive and scary for a young person, but mostly impressive. I still think, if someone had to have that kind of power, why not him? AS A PIANO MASTER PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD, pianist: The piano was his instrument, so he could experiment directly on it. In the \u201cNotations,\u201d we see a young composer, still a student, who composed a set of miniatures. And in many of them, we recognize what will become landmark gestures of Boulez, the basis of his language: violent lightenings illuminating the whole space of the instrument, permanently varied arpeggi, short unexpected gestures going in any direction.", "paragraph_answer": "ANTHONY CHEUNG, composer and pianist : I don\u2019t immediately prostrate myself at his altar. It\u2019s an ambivalent relationship. But as far as respect for him as a musician and what he\u2019s done, I have infinite respect. He\u2019s an enormous influence on how recent composers have dealt with instrumental groups. SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain. And it was the closest to Louis XIV I ever saw in my life. It was impressive and scary for a young person, but mostly impressive. I still think, if someone had to have that kind of power, why not him? AS A PIANO MASTER PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD, pianist: The piano was his instrument, so he could experiment directly on it. In the \u201cNotations,\u201d we see a young composer, still a student, who composed a set of miniatures. And in many of them, we recognize what will become landmark gestures of Boulez, the basis of his language: violent lightenings illuminating the whole space of the instrument, permanently varied arpeggi, short unexpected gestures going in any direction.", "sentence_answer": "ANTHONY CHEUNG, composer and pianist : I don\u2019t immediately prostrate myself at his altar."} +{"question": "What is the name of the piece Boulez was conducting?", "paragraph": "ANTHONY CHEUNG, composer and pianist: I don\u2019t immediately prostrate myself at his altar. It\u2019s an ambivalent relationship. But as far as respect for him as a musician and what he\u2019s done, I have infinite respect. He\u2019s an enormous influence on how recent composers have dealt with instrumental groups. SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain. And it was the closest to Louis XIV I ever saw in my life. It was impressive and scary for a young person, but mostly impressive. I still think, if someone had to have that kind of power, why not him? AS A PIANO MASTER PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD, pianist: The piano was his instrument, so he could experiment directly on it. In the \u201cNotations,\u201d we see a young composer, still a student, who composed a set of miniatures. And in many of them, we recognize what will become landmark gestures of Boulez, the basis of his language: violent lightenings illuminating the whole space of the instrument, permanently varied arpeggi, short unexpected gestures going in any direction.", "answer": "Ensemble InterContemporain", "sentence": "SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain .", "paragraph_sentence": "ANTHONY CHEUNG, composer and pianist: I don\u2019t immediately prostrate myself at his altar. It\u2019s an ambivalent relationship. But as far as respect for him as a musician and what he\u2019s done, I have infinite respect. He\u2019s an enormous influence on how recent composers have dealt with instrumental groups. SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain . And it was the closest to Louis XIV I ever saw in my life. It was impressive and scary for a young person, but mostly impressive. I still think, if someone had to have that kind of power, why not him? AS A PIANO MASTER PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD, pianist: The piano was his instrument, so he could experiment directly on it. In the \u201cNotations,\u201d we see a young composer, still a student, who composed a set of miniatures. And in many of them, we recognize what will become landmark gestures of Boulez, the basis of his language: violent lightenings illuminating the whole space of the instrument, permanently varied arpeggi, short unexpected gestures going in any direction.", "paragraph_answer": "ANTHONY CHEUNG, composer and pianist: I don\u2019t immediately prostrate myself at his altar. It\u2019s an ambivalent relationship. But as far as respect for him as a musician and what he\u2019s done, I have infinite respect. He\u2019s an enormous influence on how recent composers have dealt with instrumental groups. SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain . And it was the closest to Louis XIV I ever saw in my life. It was impressive and scary for a young person, but mostly impressive. I still think, if someone had to have that kind of power, why not him? AS A PIANO MASTER PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD, pianist: The piano was his instrument, so he could experiment directly on it. In the \u201cNotations,\u201d we see a young composer, still a student, who composed a set of miniatures. And in many of them, we recognize what will become landmark gestures of Boulez, the basis of his language: violent lightenings illuminating the whole space of the instrument, permanently varied arpeggi, short unexpected gestures going in any direction.", "sentence_answer": "SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain ."} +{"question": "In \"Notations\" he composed a set of what?", "paragraph": "ANTHONY CHEUNG, composer and pianist: I don\u2019t immediately prostrate myself at his altar. It\u2019s an ambivalent relationship. But as far as respect for him as a musician and what he\u2019s done, I have infinite respect. He\u2019s an enormous influence on how recent composers have dealt with instrumental groups. SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain. And it was the closest to Louis XIV I ever saw in my life. It was impressive and scary for a young person, but mostly impressive. I still think, if someone had to have that kind of power, why not him? AS A PIANO MASTER PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD, pianist: The piano was his instrument, so he could experiment directly on it. In the \u201cNotations,\u201d we see a young composer, still a student, who composed a set of miniatures. And in many of them, we recognize what will become landmark gestures of Boulez, the basis of his language: violent lightenings illuminating the whole space of the instrument, permanently varied arpeggi, short unexpected gestures going in any direction.", "answer": "miniatures", "sentence": "In the \u201cNotations,\u201d we see a young composer, still a student, who composed a set of miniatures .", "paragraph_sentence": "ANTHONY CHEUNG, composer and pianist: I don\u2019t immediately prostrate myself at his altar. It\u2019s an ambivalent relationship. But as far as respect for him as a musician and what he\u2019s done, I have infinite respect. He\u2019s an enormous influence on how recent composers have dealt with instrumental groups. SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain. And it was the closest to Louis XIV I ever saw in my life. It was impressive and scary for a young person, but mostly impressive. I still think, if someone had to have that kind of power, why not him? AS A PIANO MASTER PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD, pianist: The piano was his instrument, so he could experiment directly on it. In the \u201cNotations,\u201d we see a young composer, still a student, who composed a set of miniatures . And in many of them, we recognize what will become landmark gestures of Boulez, the basis of his language: violent lightenings illuminating the whole space of the instrument, permanently varied arpeggi, short unexpected gestures going in any direction.", "paragraph_answer": "ANTHONY CHEUNG, composer and pianist: I don\u2019t immediately prostrate myself at his altar. It\u2019s an ambivalent relationship. But as far as respect for him as a musician and what he\u2019s done, I have infinite respect. He\u2019s an enormous influence on how recent composers have dealt with instrumental groups. SALONEN I got to know him in the early \u201980s when I worked quite a bit at IRCAM [an avant-garde music institute founded by Mr. Boulez] and was conducting his Ensemble InterContemporain. And it was the closest to Louis XIV I ever saw in my life. It was impressive and scary for a young person, but mostly impressive. I still think, if someone had to have that kind of power, why not him? AS A PIANO MASTER PIERRE-LAURENT AIMARD, pianist: The piano was his instrument, so he could experiment directly on it. In the \u201cNotations,\u201d we see a young composer, still a student, who composed a set of miniatures . And in many of them, we recognize what will become landmark gestures of Boulez, the basis of his language: violent lightenings illuminating the whole space of the instrument, permanently varied arpeggi, short unexpected gestures going in any direction.", "sentence_answer": "In the \u201cNotations,\u201d we see a young composer, still a student, who composed a set of miniatures ."} +{"question": "Franz Welser-Most is the director of what?", "paragraph": "FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra, which Boulez first conducted in 1965: He has this unbelievable gift to convey something without showing it in his expression. The image of a conductor today is so much molded on Leonard Bernstein. Pierre is the total opposite, but nevertheless he gets these results that are not detached. They\u2019re just very clean, very to the core of the music. Conducting is partly show business, but he never looked at it that way.", "answer": "Cleveland Orchestra", "sentence": "FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra , which Boulez first conducted in 1965:", "paragraph_sentence": " FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra , which Boulez first conducted in 1965: He has this unbelievable gift to convey something without showing it in his expression. The image of a conductor today is so much molded on Leonard Bernstein. Pierre is the total opposite, but nevertheless he gets these results that are not detached. They\u2019re just very clean, very to the core of the music. Conducting is partly show business, but he never looked at it that way.", "paragraph_answer": "FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra , which Boulez first conducted in 1965: He has this unbelievable gift to convey something without showing it in his expression. The image of a conductor today is so much molded on Leonard Bernstein. Pierre is the total opposite, but nevertheless he gets these results that are not detached. They\u2019re just very clean, very to the core of the music. Conducting is partly show business, but he never looked at it that way.", "sentence_answer": "FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra , which Boulez first conducted in 1965:"} +{"question": "What year did he first conduct the Orchestra?", "paragraph": "FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra, which Boulez first conducted in 1965: He has this unbelievable gift to convey something without showing it in his expression. The image of a conductor today is so much molded on Leonard Bernstein. Pierre is the total opposite, but nevertheless he gets these results that are not detached. They\u2019re just very clean, very to the core of the music. Conducting is partly show business, but he never looked at it that way.", "answer": "1965", "sentence": "FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra, which Boulez first conducted in 1965 : He has this unbelievable gift to convey something without showing it in his expression.", "paragraph_sentence": " FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra, which Boulez first conducted in 1965 : He has this unbelievable gift to convey something without showing it in his expression. The image of a conductor today is so much molded on Leonard Bernstein. Pierre is the total opposite, but nevertheless he gets these results that are not detached. They\u2019re just very clean, very to the core of the music. Conducting is partly show business, but he never looked at it that way.", "paragraph_answer": "FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra, which Boulez first conducted in 1965 : He has this unbelievable gift to convey something without showing it in his expression. The image of a conductor today is so much molded on Leonard Bernstein. Pierre is the total opposite, but nevertheless he gets these results that are not detached. They\u2019re just very clean, very to the core of the music. Conducting is partly show business, but he never looked at it that way.", "sentence_answer": "FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra, which Boulez first conducted in 1965 : He has this unbelievable gift to convey something without showing it in his expression."} +{"question": "The image of a conductor is molded on who?", "paragraph": "FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra, which Boulez first conducted in 1965: He has this unbelievable gift to convey something without showing it in his expression. The image of a conductor today is so much molded on Leonard Bernstein. Pierre is the total opposite, but nevertheless he gets these results that are not detached. They\u2019re just very clean, very to the core of the music. Conducting is partly show business, but he never looked at it that way.", "answer": "Leonard Bernstein", "sentence": "The image of a conductor today is so much molded on Leonard Bernstein .", "paragraph_sentence": "FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra, which Boulez first conducted in 1965: He has this unbelievable gift to convey something without showing it in his expression. The image of a conductor today is so much molded on Leonard Bernstein . Pierre is the total opposite, but nevertheless he gets these results that are not detached. They\u2019re just very clean, very to the core of the music. Conducting is partly show business, but he never looked at it that way.", "paragraph_answer": "FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra, which Boulez first conducted in 1965: He has this unbelievable gift to convey something without showing it in his expression. The image of a conductor today is so much molded on Leonard Bernstein . Pierre is the total opposite, but nevertheless he gets these results that are not detached. They\u2019re just very clean, very to the core of the music. Conducting is partly show business, but he never looked at it that way.", "sentence_answer": "The image of a conductor today is so much molded on Leonard Bernstein ."} +{"question": "Conducting is partly what?", "paragraph": "FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra, which Boulez first conducted in 1965: He has this unbelievable gift to convey something without showing it in his expression. The image of a conductor today is so much molded on Leonard Bernstein. Pierre is the total opposite, but nevertheless he gets these results that are not detached. They\u2019re just very clean, very to the core of the music. Conducting is partly show business, but he never looked at it that way.", "answer": "show business", "sentence": "Conducting is partly show business , but he never looked at it that way.", "paragraph_sentence": "FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra, which Boulez first conducted in 1965: He has this unbelievable gift to convey something without showing it in his expression. The image of a conductor today is so much molded on Leonard Bernstein. Pierre is the total opposite, but nevertheless he gets these results that are not detached. They\u2019re just very clean, very to the core of the music. Conducting is partly show business , but he never looked at it that way. ", "paragraph_answer": "FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra, which Boulez first conducted in 1965: He has this unbelievable gift to convey something without showing it in his expression. The image of a conductor today is so much molded on Leonard Bernstein. Pierre is the total opposite, but nevertheless he gets these results that are not detached. They\u2019re just very clean, very to the core of the music. Conducting is partly show business , but he never looked at it that way.", "sentence_answer": "Conducting is partly show business , but he never looked at it that way."} +{"question": "Pierre's results get to the very what?", "paragraph": "FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra, which Boulez first conducted in 1965: He has this unbelievable gift to convey something without showing it in his expression. The image of a conductor today is so much molded on Leonard Bernstein. Pierre is the total opposite, but nevertheless he gets these results that are not detached. They\u2019re just very clean, very to the core of the music. Conducting is partly show business, but he never looked at it that way.", "answer": "core of the music", "sentence": "They\u2019re just very clean, very to the core of the music .", "paragraph_sentence": "FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra, which Boulez first conducted in 1965: He has this unbelievable gift to convey something without showing it in his expression. The image of a conductor today is so much molded on Leonard Bernstein. Pierre is the total opposite, but nevertheless he gets these results that are not detached. They\u2019re just very clean, very to the core of the music . Conducting is partly show business, but he never looked at it that way.", "paragraph_answer": "FRANZ WELSER-M\u00d6ST, music director of the Cleveland Orchestra, which Boulez first conducted in 1965: He has this unbelievable gift to convey something without showing it in his expression. The image of a conductor today is so much molded on Leonard Bernstein. Pierre is the total opposite, but nevertheless he gets these results that are not detached. They\u2019re just very clean, very to the core of the music . Conducting is partly show business, but he never looked at it that way.", "sentence_answer": "They\u2019re just very clean, very to the core of the music ."} +{"question": "The expression of Western art music comes from what?", "paragraph": "SALONEN He always said that the form and the expression of most Western art music come from the harmony. If you don\u2019t know the harmony well, you cannot understand, let alone convey, the sense of the form to anybody. On a practical level it means you have to go through every chord when you go through a score. It sounds obvious and trivial, but if you study, say, \u201cG\u00f6tterd\u00e4mmerung\u201d or \u201cElektra,\u201d to get a clear idea of the harmonic structure takes a lot of time. There are no shortcuts. You have to learn what the principles of the harmony are, and then you can plan your so-called interpretation.", "answer": "the harmony", "sentence": "SALONEN He always said that the form and the expression of most Western art music come from the harmony .", "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": "SALONEN He always said that the form and the expression of most Western art music come from the harmony ."} +{"question": "If you don't know the harmony, you cannot what?", "paragraph": "SALONEN He always said that the form and the expression of most Western art music come from the harmony. If you don\u2019t know the harmony well, you cannot understand, let alone convey, the sense of the form to anybody. On a practical level it means you have to go through every chord when you go through a score. It sounds obvious and trivial, but if you study, say, \u201cG\u00f6tterd\u00e4mmerung\u201d or \u201cElektra,\u201d to get a clear idea of the harmonic structure takes a lot of time. There are no shortcuts. You have to learn what the principles of the harmony are, and then you can plan your so-called interpretation.", "answer": "understand", "sentence": "If you don\u2019t know the harmony well, you cannot understand , let alone convey, the sense of the form to anybody.", "paragraph_sentence": "SALONEN He always said that the form and the expression of most Western art music come from the harmony. If you don\u2019t know the harmony well, you cannot understand , let alone convey, the sense of the form to anybody. On a practical level it means you have to go through every chord when you go through a score. It sounds obvious and trivial, but if you study, say, \u201cG\u00f6tterd\u00e4mmerung\u201d or \u201cElektra,\u201d to get a clear idea of the harmonic structure takes a lot of time. There are no shortcuts. You have to learn what the principles of the harmony are, and then you can plan your so-called interpretation.", "paragraph_answer": "SALONEN He always said that the form and the expression of most Western art music come from the harmony. If you don\u2019t know the harmony well, you cannot understand , let alone convey, the sense of the form to anybody. On a practical level it means you have to go through every chord when you go through a score. It sounds obvious and trivial, but if you study, say, \u201cG\u00f6tterd\u00e4mmerung\u201d or \u201cElektra,\u201d to get a clear idea of the harmonic structure takes a lot of time. There are no shortcuts. You have to learn what the principles of the harmony are, and then you can plan your so-called interpretation.", "sentence_answer": "If you don\u2019t know the harmony well, you cannot understand , let alone convey, the sense of the form to anybody."} +{"question": "What two pieces should you study to get a clear idea of harmonic structure?", "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": "\u201cG\u00f6tterd\u00e4mmerung\u201d or \u201cElektra,\u201d", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "You must learn the principles of harmony before you can what?", "paragraph": "SALONEN He always said that the form and the expression of most Western art music come from the harmony. If you don\u2019t know the harmony well, you cannot understand, let alone convey, the sense of the form to anybody. On a practical level it means you have to go through every chord when you go through a score. It sounds obvious and trivial, but if you study, say, \u201cG\u00f6tterd\u00e4mmerung\u201d or \u201cElektra,\u201d to get a clear idea of the harmonic structure takes a lot of time. There are no shortcuts. You have to learn what the principles of the harmony are, and then you can plan your so-called interpretation.", "answer": "plan your so-called interpretation", "sentence": "then you can plan your so-called interpretation .", "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": "then you can plan your so-called interpretation ."} +{"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 ."} +{"question": "What was the name of Boulez's performance?", "paragraph": "WELSER-M\u00d6ST, on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony: Some people give everything away in the first movement, and then you have to sit there for another hour. He didn\u2019t. It was almost irritating at first. But later on, you understood why he was doing what he did, and in the end it was so much more moving. He made Mahler\u2019s music sound pure.", "answer": "Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony", "sentence": "WELSER-M\u00d6ST, on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony : Some people give everything away in the first movement, and then you have to sit there for another hour.", "paragraph_sentence": " WELSER-M\u00d6ST, on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony : Some people give everything away in the first movement, and then you have to sit there for another hour. He didn\u2019t. It was almost irritating at first. But later on, you understood why he was doing what he did, and in the end it was so much more moving. He made Mahler\u2019s music sound pure.", "paragraph_answer": "WELSER-M\u00d6ST, on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony : Some people give everything away in the first movement, and then you have to sit there for another hour. He didn\u2019t. It was almost irritating at first. But later on, you understood why he was doing what he did, and in the end it was so much more moving. He made Mahler\u2019s music sound pure.", "sentence_answer": "WELSER-M\u00d6ST, on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony : Some people give everything away in the first movement, and then you have to sit there for another hour."} +{"question": "In the end his piece was so much more what?", "paragraph": "WELSER-M\u00d6ST, on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony: Some people give everything away in the first movement, and then you have to sit there for another hour. He didn\u2019t. It was almost irritating at first. But later on, you understood why he was doing what he did, and in the end it was so much more moving. He made Mahler\u2019s music sound pure.", "answer": "moving", "sentence": "But later on, you understood why he was doing what he did, and in the end it was so much more moving .", "paragraph_sentence": "WELSER-M\u00d6ST, on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony: Some people give everything away in the first movement, and then you have to sit there for another hour. He didn\u2019t. It was almost irritating at first. But later on, you understood why he was doing what he did, and in the end it was so much more moving . He made Mahler\u2019s music sound pure.", "paragraph_answer": "WELSER-M\u00d6ST, on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony: Some people give everything away in the first movement, and then you have to sit there for another hour. He didn\u2019t. It was almost irritating at first. But later on, you understood why he was doing what he did, and in the end it was so much more moving . He made Mahler\u2019s music sound pure.", "sentence_answer": "But later on, you understood why he was doing what he did, and in the end it was so much more moving ."} +{"question": "He was able to make Mahler's music sound what?", "paragraph": "WELSER-M\u00d6ST, on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony: Some people give everything away in the first movement, and then you have to sit there for another hour. He didn\u2019t. It was almost irritating at first. But later on, you understood why he was doing what he did, and in the end it was so much more moving. He made Mahler\u2019s music sound pure.", "answer": "pure", "sentence": "He made Mahler\u2019s music sound pure .", "paragraph_sentence": "WELSER-M\u00d6ST, on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony: Some people give everything away in the first movement, and then you have to sit there for another hour. He didn\u2019t. It was almost irritating at first. But later on, you understood why he was doing what he did, and in the end it was so much more moving. He made Mahler\u2019s music sound pure . ", "paragraph_answer": "WELSER-M\u00d6ST, on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony: Some people give everything away in the first movement, and then you have to sit there for another hour. He didn\u2019t. It was almost irritating at first. But later on, you understood why he was doing what he did, and in the end it was so much more moving. He made Mahler\u2019s music sound pure .", "sentence_answer": "He made Mahler\u2019s music sound pure ."} +{"question": "When do most people give everything away?", "paragraph": "WELSER-M\u00d6ST, on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony: Some people give everything away in the first movement, and then you have to sit there for another hour. He didn\u2019t. It was almost irritating at first. But later on, you understood why he was doing what he did, and in the end it was so much more moving. He made Mahler\u2019s music sound pure.", "answer": "first movement", "sentence": "WELSER-M\u00d6ST, on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony: Some people give everything away in the first movement , and then you have to sit there for another hour.", "paragraph_sentence": " WELSER-M\u00d6ST, on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony: Some people give everything away in the first movement , and then you have to sit there for another hour. He didn\u2019t. It was almost irritating at first. But later on, you understood why he was doing what he did, and in the end it was so much more moving. He made Mahler\u2019s music sound pure.", "paragraph_answer": "WELSER-M\u00d6ST, on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony: Some people give everything away in the first movement , and then you have to sit there for another hour. He didn\u2019t. It was almost irritating at first. But later on, you understood why he was doing what he did, and in the end it was so much more moving. He made Mahler\u2019s music sound pure.", "sentence_answer": "WELSER-M\u00d6ST, on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony: Some people give everything away in the first movement , and then you have to sit there for another hour."} +{"question": "What is the name of the person talking about Boulez's performance?", "paragraph": "WELSER-M\u00d6ST, on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony: Some people give everything away in the first movement, and then you have to sit there for another hour. He didn\u2019t. It was almost irritating at first. But later on, you understood why he was doing what he did, and in the end it was so much more moving. He made Mahler\u2019s music sound pure.", "answer": "WELSER-M\u00d6ST", "sentence": "WELSER-M\u00d6ST , on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony: Some people give everything away in the first movement, and then you have to sit there for another hour.", "paragraph_sentence": " WELSER-M\u00d6ST , on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony: Some people give everything away in the first movement, and then you have to sit there for another hour. He didn\u2019t. It was almost irritating at first. But later on, you understood why he was doing what he did, and in the end it was so much more moving. He made Mahler\u2019s music sound pure.", "paragraph_answer": " WELSER-M\u00d6ST , on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony: Some people give everything away in the first movement, and then you have to sit there for another hour. He didn\u2019t. It was almost irritating at first. But later on, you understood why he was doing what he did, and in the end it was so much more moving. He made Mahler\u2019s music sound pure.", "sentence_answer": " WELSER-M\u00d6ST , on a memorable Boulez performance of Mahler\u2019s Third Symphony: Some people give everything away in the first movement, and then you have to sit there for another hour."} +{"question": "What did Marc-Andre Dalbavie study with Boulez?", "paragraph": "MARC-ANDR\u00c9 DALBAVIE, composer: I just studied conducting with Boulez, but it had an enormous influence on my writing. In the beginning it wasn\u2019t clear, but progressively in the 1990s, I started to understand what he was teaching me. Around \u201995 and \u201996, I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome, so I had less contact with Pierre. The less contact I had, the more I realized his influence. If you know his piece \u201cM\u00e9moriale,\u201d it revolves around this E-flat and you don\u2019t know if it\u2019s a tonality or a gravity center. This idea also became for me very strong. It was a sort of post-atonal moment.", "answer": "conducting", "sentence": "I just studied conducting with Boulez, but it had an enormous influence on my writing.", "paragraph_sentence": "MARC-ANDR\u00c9 DALBAVIE, composer: I just studied conducting with Boulez, but it had an enormous influence on my writing. In the beginning it wasn\u2019t clear, but progressively in the 1990s, I started to understand what he was teaching me. Around \u201995 and \u201996, I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome, so I had less contact with Pierre. The less contact I had, the more I realized his influence. If you know his piece \u201cM\u00e9moriale,\u201d it revolves around this E-flat and you don\u2019t know if it\u2019s a tonality or a gravity center. This idea also became for me very strong. It was a sort of post-atonal moment.", "paragraph_answer": "MARC-ANDR\u00c9 DALBAVIE, composer: I just studied conducting with Boulez, but it had an enormous influence on my writing. In the beginning it wasn\u2019t clear, but progressively in the 1990s, I started to understand what he was teaching me. Around \u201995 and \u201996, I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome, so I had less contact with Pierre. The less contact I had, the more I realized his influence. If you know his piece \u201cM\u00e9moriale,\u201d it revolves around this E-flat and you don\u2019t know if it\u2019s a tonality or a gravity center. This idea also became for me very strong. It was a sort of post-atonal moment.", "sentence_answer": "I just studied conducting with Boulez, but it had an enormous influence on my writing."} +{"question": "His study with Boulez had an influence on what?", "paragraph": "MARC-ANDR\u00c9 DALBAVIE, composer: I just studied conducting with Boulez, but it had an enormous influence on my writing. In the beginning it wasn\u2019t clear, but progressively in the 1990s, I started to understand what he was teaching me. Around \u201995 and \u201996, I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome, so I had less contact with Pierre. The less contact I had, the more I realized his influence. If you know his piece \u201cM\u00e9moriale,\u201d it revolves around this E-flat and you don\u2019t know if it\u2019s a tonality or a gravity center. This idea also became for me very strong. It was a sort of post-atonal moment.", "answer": "writing", "sentence": "I just studied conducting with Boulez, but it had an enormous influence on my writing .", "paragraph_sentence": "MARC-ANDR\u00c9 DALBAVIE, composer: I just studied conducting with Boulez, but it had an enormous influence on my writing . In the beginning it wasn\u2019t clear, but progressively in the 1990s, I started to understand what he was teaching me. Around \u201995 and \u201996, I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome, so I had less contact with Pierre. The less contact I had, the more I realized his influence. If you know his piece \u201cM\u00e9moriale,\u201d it revolves around this E-flat and you don\u2019t know if it\u2019s a tonality or a gravity center. This idea also became for me very strong. It was a sort of post-atonal moment.", "paragraph_answer": "MARC-ANDR\u00c9 DALBAVIE, composer: I just studied conducting with Boulez, but it had an enormous influence on my writing . In the beginning it wasn\u2019t clear, but progressively in the 1990s, I started to understand what he was teaching me. Around \u201995 and \u201996, I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome, so I had less contact with Pierre. The less contact I had, the more I realized his influence. If you know his piece \u201cM\u00e9moriale,\u201d it revolves around this E-flat and you don\u2019t know if it\u2019s a tonality or a gravity center. This idea also became for me very strong. It was a sort of post-atonal moment.", "sentence_answer": "I just studied conducting with Boulez, but it had an enormous influence on my writing ."} +{"question": "What year was he writing his concerto?", "paragraph": "MARC-ANDR\u00c9 DALBAVIE, composer: I just studied conducting with Boulez, but it had an enormous influence on my writing. In the beginning it wasn\u2019t clear, but progressively in the 1990s, I started to understand what he was teaching me. Around \u201995 and \u201996, I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome, so I had less contact with Pierre. The less contact I had, the more I realized his influence. If you know his piece \u201cM\u00e9moriale,\u201d it revolves around this E-flat and you don\u2019t know if it\u2019s a tonality or a gravity center. This idea also became for me very strong. It was a sort of post-atonal moment.", "answer": "Around \u201995 and \u201996", "sentence": "Around \u201995 and \u201996 , I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome, so I had less contact with Pierre.", "paragraph_sentence": "MARC-ANDR\u00c9 DALBAVIE, composer: I just studied conducting with Boulez, but it had an enormous influence on my writing. In the beginning it wasn\u2019t clear, but progressively in the 1990s, I started to understand what he was teaching me. Around \u201995 and \u201996 , I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome, so I had less contact with Pierre. The less contact I had, the more I realized his influence. If you know his piece \u201cM\u00e9moriale,\u201d it revolves around this E-flat and you don\u2019t know if it\u2019s a tonality or a gravity center. This idea also became for me very strong. It was a sort of post-atonal moment.", "paragraph_answer": "MARC-ANDR\u00c9 DALBAVIE, composer: I just studied conducting with Boulez, but it had an enormous influence on my writing. In the beginning it wasn\u2019t clear, but progressively in the 1990s, I started to understand what he was teaching me. Around \u201995 and \u201996 , I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome, so I had less contact with Pierre. The less contact I had, the more I realized his influence. If you know his piece \u201cM\u00e9moriale,\u201d it revolves around this E-flat and you don\u2019t know if it\u2019s a tonality or a gravity center. This idea also became for me very strong. It was a sort of post-atonal moment.", "sentence_answer": " Around \u201995 and \u201996 , I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome, so I had less contact with Pierre."} +{"question": "What instrument was he writing his concerto for?", "paragraph": "MARC-ANDR\u00c9 DALBAVIE, composer: I just studied conducting with Boulez, but it had an enormous influence on my writing. In the beginning it wasn\u2019t clear, but progressively in the 1990s, I started to understand what he was teaching me. Around \u201995 and \u201996, I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome, so I had less contact with Pierre. The less contact I had, the more I realized his influence. If you know his piece \u201cM\u00e9moriale,\u201d it revolves around this E-flat and you don\u2019t know if it\u2019s a tonality or a gravity center. This idea also became for me very strong. It was a sort of post-atonal moment.", "answer": "violin", "sentence": "Around \u201995 and \u201996, I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome, so I had less contact with Pierre.", "paragraph_sentence": "MARC-ANDR\u00c9 DALBAVIE, composer: I just studied conducting with Boulez, but it had an enormous influence on my writing. In the beginning it wasn\u2019t clear, but progressively in the 1990s, I started to understand what he was teaching me. Around \u201995 and \u201996, I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome, so I had less contact with Pierre. The less contact I had, the more I realized his influence. If you know his piece \u201cM\u00e9moriale,\u201d it revolves around this E-flat and you don\u2019t know if it\u2019s a tonality or a gravity center. This idea also became for me very strong. It was a sort of post-atonal moment.", "paragraph_answer": "MARC-ANDR\u00c9 DALBAVIE, composer: I just studied conducting with Boulez, but it had an enormous influence on my writing. In the beginning it wasn\u2019t clear, but progressively in the 1990s, I started to understand what he was teaching me. Around \u201995 and \u201996, I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome, so I had less contact with Pierre. The less contact I had, the more I realized his influence. If you know his piece \u201cM\u00e9moriale,\u201d it revolves around this E-flat and you don\u2019t know if it\u2019s a tonality or a gravity center. This idea also became for me very strong. It was a sort of post-atonal moment.", "sentence_answer": "Around \u201995 and \u201996, I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome, so I had less contact with Pierre."} +{"question": "Where was he living in the 1990's?", "paragraph": "MARC-ANDR\u00c9 DALBAVIE, composer: I just studied conducting with Boulez, but it had an enormous influence on my writing. In the beginning it wasn\u2019t clear, but progressively in the 1990s, I started to understand what he was teaching me. Around \u201995 and \u201996, I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome, so I had less contact with Pierre. The less contact I had, the more I realized his influence. If you know his piece \u201cM\u00e9moriale,\u201d it revolves around this E-flat and you don\u2019t know if it\u2019s a tonality or a gravity center. This idea also became for me very strong. It was a sort of post-atonal moment.", "answer": "Rome", "sentence": "Around \u201995 and \u201996, I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome , so I had less contact with Pierre.", "paragraph_sentence": "MARC-ANDR\u00c9 DALBAVIE, composer: I just studied conducting with Boulez, but it had an enormous influence on my writing. In the beginning it wasn\u2019t clear, but progressively in the 1990s, I started to understand what he was teaching me. Around \u201995 and \u201996, I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome , so I had less contact with Pierre. The less contact I had, the more I realized his influence. If you know his piece \u201cM\u00e9moriale,\u201d it revolves around this E-flat and you don\u2019t know if it\u2019s a tonality or a gravity center. This idea also became for me very strong. It was a sort of post-atonal moment.", "paragraph_answer": "MARC-ANDR\u00c9 DALBAVIE, composer: I just studied conducting with Boulez, but it had an enormous influence on my writing. In the beginning it wasn\u2019t clear, but progressively in the 1990s, I started to understand what he was teaching me. Around \u201995 and \u201996, I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome , so I had less contact with Pierre. The less contact I had, the more I realized his influence. If you know his piece \u201cM\u00e9moriale,\u201d it revolves around this E-flat and you don\u2019t know if it\u2019s a tonality or a gravity center. This idea also became for me very strong. It was a sort of post-atonal moment.", "sentence_answer": "Around \u201995 and \u201996, I was writing my concerto for violin and I was living in Rome , so I had less contact with Pierre."} +{"question": "What type of language doesn't have a relationship with what he does?", "paragraph": "AS AN INSPIRATION CHEUNG His tonal language doesn\u2019t have much of a relationship with what I do, whereas his approach to time is much more influential for me. You can have stretches of his music that are just dealing with the duration of natural resonances of instruments \u2014 attacks and decays \u2014 so you have this music that feels like breathing. It\u2019s unpredictable, but very natural.", "answer": "tonal", "sentence": "AS AN INSPIRATION CHEUNG His tonal language doesn\u2019t have much of a relationship with what I do, whereas his approach to time is much more influential for me.", "paragraph_sentence": " AS AN INSPIRATION CHEUNG His tonal language doesn\u2019t have much of a relationship with what I do, whereas his approach to time is much more influential for me. You can have stretches of his music that are just dealing with the duration of natural resonances of instruments \u2014 attacks and decays \u2014 so you have this music that feels like breathing. It\u2019s unpredictable, but very natural.", "paragraph_answer": "AS AN INSPIRATION CHEUNG His tonal language doesn\u2019t have much of a relationship with what I do, whereas his approach to time is much more influential for me. You can have stretches of his music that are just dealing with the duration of natural resonances of instruments \u2014 attacks and decays \u2014 so you have this music that feels like breathing. It\u2019s unpredictable, but very natural.", "sentence_answer": "AS AN INSPIRATION CHEUNG His tonal language doesn\u2019t have much of a relationship with what I do, whereas his approach to time is much more influential for me."} +{"question": "what are the natural resonances of instruments?", "paragraph": "AS AN INSPIRATION CHEUNG His tonal language doesn\u2019t have much of a relationship with what I do, whereas his approach to time is much more influential for me. You can have stretches of his music that are just dealing with the duration of natural resonances of instruments \u2014 attacks and decays \u2014 so you have this music that feels like breathing. It\u2019s unpredictable, but very natural.", "answer": "attacks and decays", "sentence": "You can have stretches of his music that are just dealing with the duration of natural resonances of instruments \u2014 attacks and decays \u2014 so you have this music that feels like breathing.", "paragraph_sentence": "AS AN INSPIRATION CHEUNG His tonal language doesn\u2019t have much of a relationship with what I do, whereas his approach to time is much more influential for me. You can have stretches of his music that are just dealing with the duration of natural resonances of instruments \u2014 attacks and decays \u2014 so you have this music that feels like breathing. It\u2019s unpredictable, but very natural.", "paragraph_answer": "AS AN INSPIRATION CHEUNG His tonal language doesn\u2019t have much of a relationship with what I do, whereas his approach to time is much more influential for me. You can have stretches of his music that are just dealing with the duration of natural resonances of instruments \u2014 attacks and decays \u2014 so you have this music that feels like breathing. It\u2019s unpredictable, but very natural.", "sentence_answer": "You can have stretches of his music that are just dealing with the duration of natural resonances of instruments \u2014 attacks and decays \u2014 so you have this music that feels like breathing."} +{"question": "What is more influential to him?", "paragraph": "AS AN INSPIRATION CHEUNG His tonal language doesn\u2019t have much of a relationship with what I do, whereas his approach to time is much more influential for me. You can have stretches of his music that are just dealing with the duration of natural resonances of instruments \u2014 attacks and decays \u2014 so you have this music that feels like breathing. It\u2019s unpredictable, but very natural.", "answer": "his approach to time", "sentence": "AS AN INSPIRATION CHEUNG His tonal language doesn\u2019t have much of a relationship with what I do, whereas his approach to time is much more influential for me.", "paragraph_sentence": " AS AN INSPIRATION CHEUNG His tonal language doesn\u2019t have much of a relationship with what I do, whereas his approach to time is much more influential for me. You can have stretches of his music that are just dealing with the duration of natural resonances of instruments \u2014 attacks and decays \u2014 so you have this music that feels like breathing. It\u2019s unpredictable, but very natural.", "paragraph_answer": "AS AN INSPIRATION CHEUNG His tonal language doesn\u2019t have much of a relationship with what I do, whereas his approach to time is much more influential for me. You can have stretches of his music that are just dealing with the duration of natural resonances of instruments \u2014 attacks and decays \u2014 so you have this music that feels like breathing. It\u2019s unpredictable, but very natural.", "sentence_answer": "AS AN INSPIRATION CHEUNG His tonal language doesn\u2019t have much of a relationship with what I do, whereas his approach to time is much more influential for me."} +{"question": "The attacks and decays make it so that it feels like the music is doing what?", "paragraph": "AS AN INSPIRATION CHEUNG His tonal language doesn\u2019t have much of a relationship with what I do, whereas his approach to time is much more influential for me. You can have stretches of his music that are just dealing with the duration of natural resonances of instruments \u2014 attacks and decays \u2014 so you have this music that feels like breathing. It\u2019s unpredictable, but very natural.", "answer": "breathing", "sentence": "You can have stretches of his music that are just dealing with the duration of natural resonances of instruments \u2014 attacks and decays \u2014 so you have this music that feels like breathing .", "paragraph_sentence": "AS AN INSPIRATION CHEUNG His tonal language doesn\u2019t have much of a relationship with what I do, whereas his approach to time is much more influential for me. You can have stretches of his music that are just dealing with the duration of natural resonances of instruments \u2014 attacks and decays \u2014 so you have this music that feels like breathing . It\u2019s unpredictable, but very natural.", "paragraph_answer": "AS AN INSPIRATION CHEUNG His tonal language doesn\u2019t have much of a relationship with what I do, whereas his approach to time is much more influential for me. You can have stretches of his music that are just dealing with the duration of natural resonances of instruments \u2014 attacks and decays \u2014 so you have this music that feels like breathing . It\u2019s unpredictable, but very natural.", "sentence_answer": "You can have stretches of his music that are just dealing with the duration of natural resonances of instruments \u2014 attacks and decays \u2014 so you have this music that feels like breathing ."} +{"question": "The natural resonances make it very what?", "paragraph": "AS AN INSPIRATION CHEUNG His tonal language doesn\u2019t have much of a relationship with what I do, whereas his approach to time is much more influential for me. You can have stretches of his music that are just dealing with the duration of natural resonances of instruments \u2014 attacks and decays \u2014 so you have this music that feels like breathing. It\u2019s unpredictable, but very natural.", "answer": "unpredictable, but very natural", "sentence": "It\u2019s unpredictable, but very natural .", "paragraph_sentence": "AS AN INSPIRATION CHEUNG His tonal language doesn\u2019t have much of a relationship with what I do, whereas his approach to time is much more influential for me. You can have stretches of his music that are just dealing with the duration of natural resonances of instruments \u2014 attacks and decays \u2014 so you have this music that feels like breathing. It\u2019s unpredictable, but very natural . ", "paragraph_answer": "AS AN INSPIRATION CHEUNG His tonal language doesn\u2019t have much of a relationship with what I do, whereas his approach to time is much more influential for me. You can have stretches of his music that are just dealing with the duration of natural resonances of instruments \u2014 attacks and decays \u2014 so you have this music that feels like breathing. It\u2019s unpredictable, but very natural .", "sentence_answer": "It\u2019s unpredictable, but very natural ."} +{"question": "What occupation was his father?", "paragraph": "A. We lived in a small house in the Midwest. My dad was killed in the Berlin Crisis \u2014 he was a navigator on a bomber. There was no life insurance. My mom had to raise three boys. We grew up as latchkey kids. We never felt poor, but we always worked hard. I had paper routes, and in high school I actually had a night job in a factory. What kind of factory? It was a plastics molding factory. The thing I remember most is making fly swatters. This big press would make them and then it would open and the fly swatters would pop out, and you had to reach in, grab them and get your hand out before it slammed back again to make the next ones. And where did you go to college? University of Missouri for undergraduate. When I got out of school, it was 1972, and not particularly the best economic time. I got a job selling tools to stores. As an introvert, I would never have picked being a salesman as a career. I was pretty good at it, but I didn\u2019t like it. Then I went to the University of Kansas to get an M.B.A. And your career plan then?", "answer": "plastics molding factory", "sentence": "It was a plastics molding factory .", "paragraph_sentence": "A. We lived in a small house in the Midwest. My dad was killed in the Berlin Crisis \u2014 he was a navigator on a bomber. There was no life insurance. My mom had to raise three boys. We grew up as latchkey kids. We never felt poor, but we always worked hard. I had paper routes, and in high school I actually had a night job in a factory. What kind of factory? It was a plastics molding factory . The thing I remember most is making fly swatters. This big press would make them and then it would open and the fly swatters would pop out, and you had to reach in, grab them and get your hand out before it slammed back again to make the next ones. And where did you go to college? University of Missouri for undergraduate. When I got out of school, it was 1972, and not particularly the best economic time. I got a job selling tools to stores. As an introvert, I would never have picked being a salesman as a career. I was pretty good at it, but I didn\u2019t like it. Then I went to the University of Kansas to get an M.B.A. And your career plan then?", "paragraph_answer": "A. We lived in a small house in the Midwest. My dad was killed in the Berlin Crisis \u2014 he was a navigator on a bomber. There was no life insurance. My mom had to raise three boys. We grew up as latchkey kids. We never felt poor, but we always worked hard. I had paper routes, and in high school I actually had a night job in a factory. What kind of factory? It was a plastics molding factory . The thing I remember most is making fly swatters. This big press would make them and then it would open and the fly swatters would pop out, and you had to reach in, grab them and get your hand out before it slammed back again to make the next ones. And where did you go to college? University of Missouri for undergraduate. When I got out of school, it was 1972, and not particularly the best economic time. I got a job selling tools to stores. As an introvert, I would never have picked being a salesman as a career. I was pretty good at it, but I didn\u2019t like it. Then I went to the University of Kansas to get an M.B.A. And your career plan then?", "sentence_answer": "It was a plastics molding factory ."} +{"question": "What night job did the Arthur had?", "paragraph": "A. We lived in a small house in the Midwest. My dad was killed in the Berlin Crisis \u2014 he was a navigator on a bomber. There was no life insurance. My mom had to raise three boys. We grew up as latchkey kids. We never felt poor, but we always worked hard. I had paper routes, and in high school I actually had a night job in a factory. What kind of factory? It was a plastics molding factory. The thing I remember most is making fly swatters. This big press would make them and then it would open and the fly swatters would pop out, and you had to reach in, grab them and get your hand out before it slammed back again to make the next ones. And where did you go to college? University of Missouri for undergraduate. When I got out of school, it was 1972, and not particularly the best economic time. I got a job selling tools to stores. As an introvert, I would never have picked being a salesman as a career. I was pretty good at it, but I didn\u2019t like it. Then I went to the University of Kansas to get an M.B.A. And your career plan then?", "answer": "plastics molding factory.", "sentence": "It was a plastics molding factory. The thing I remember most is making fly swatters.", "paragraph_sentence": "A. We lived in a small house in the Midwest. My dad was killed in the Berlin Crisis \u2014 he was a navigator on a bomber. There was no life insurance. My mom had to raise three boys. We grew up as latchkey kids. We never felt poor, but we always worked hard. I had paper routes, and in high school I actually had a night job in a factory. What kind of factory? It was a plastics molding factory. The thing I remember most is making fly swatters. This big press would make them and then it would open and the fly swatters would pop out, and you had to reach in, grab them and get your hand out before it slammed back again to make the next ones. And where did you go to college? University of Missouri for undergraduate. When I got out of school, it was 1972, and not particularly the best economic time. I got a job selling tools to stores. As an introvert, I would never have picked being a salesman as a career. I was pretty good at it, but I didn\u2019t like it. Then I went to the University of Kansas to get an M.B.A. And your career plan then?", "paragraph_answer": "A. We lived in a small house in the Midwest. My dad was killed in the Berlin Crisis \u2014 he was a navigator on a bomber. There was no life insurance. My mom had to raise three boys. We grew up as latchkey kids. We never felt poor, but we always worked hard. I had paper routes, and in high school I actually had a night job in a factory. What kind of factory? It was a plastics molding factory. The thing I remember most is making fly swatters. This big press would make them and then it would open and the fly swatters would pop out, and you had to reach in, grab them and get your hand out before it slammed back again to make the next ones. And where did you go to college? University of Missouri for undergraduate. When I got out of school, it was 1972, and not particularly the best economic time. I got a job selling tools to stores. As an introvert, I would never have picked being a salesman as a career. I was pretty good at it, but I didn\u2019t like it. Then I went to the University of Kansas to get an M.B.A. And your career plan then?", "sentence_answer": "It was a plastics molding factory. The thing I remember most is making fly swatters."} +{"question": "What year did the Arthur get out of school?", "paragraph": "A. We lived in a small house in the Midwest. My dad was killed in the Berlin Crisis \u2014 he was a navigator on a bomber. There was no life insurance. My mom had to raise three boys. We grew up as latchkey kids. We never felt poor, but we always worked hard. I had paper routes, and in high school I actually had a night job in a factory. What kind of factory? It was a plastics molding factory. The thing I remember most is making fly swatters. This big press would make them and then it would open and the fly swatters would pop out, and you had to reach in, grab them and get your hand out before it slammed back again to make the next ones. And where did you go to college? University of Missouri for undergraduate. When I got out of school, it was 1972, and not particularly the best economic time. I got a job selling tools to stores. As an introvert, I would never have picked being a salesman as a career. I was pretty good at it, but I didn\u2019t like it. Then I went to the University of Kansas to get an M.B.A. And your career plan then?", "answer": "1972", "sentence": "When I got out of school, it was 1972 , and not particularly the best economic time.", "paragraph_sentence": "A. We lived in a small house in the Midwest. My dad was killed in the Berlin Crisis \u2014 he was a navigator on a bomber. There was no life insurance. My mom had to raise three boys. We grew up as latchkey kids. We never felt poor, but we always worked hard. I had paper routes, and in high school I actually had a night job in a factory. What kind of factory? It was a plastics molding factory. The thing I remember most is making fly swatters. This big press would make them and then it would open and the fly swatters would pop out, and you had to reach in, grab them and get your hand out before it slammed back again to make the next ones. And where did you go to college? University of Missouri for undergraduate. When I got out of school, it was 1972 , and not particularly the best economic time. I got a job selling tools to stores. As an introvert, I would never have picked being a salesman as a career. I was pretty good at it, but I didn\u2019t like it. Then I went to the University of Kansas to get an M.B.A. And your career plan then?", "paragraph_answer": "A. We lived in a small house in the Midwest. My dad was killed in the Berlin Crisis \u2014 he was a navigator on a bomber. There was no life insurance. My mom had to raise three boys. We grew up as latchkey kids. We never felt poor, but we always worked hard. I had paper routes, and in high school I actually had a night job in a factory. What kind of factory? It was a plastics molding factory. The thing I remember most is making fly swatters. This big press would make them and then it would open and the fly swatters would pop out, and you had to reach in, grab them and get your hand out before it slammed back again to make the next ones. And where did you go to college? University of Missouri for undergraduate. When I got out of school, it was 1972 , and not particularly the best economic time. I got a job selling tools to stores. As an introvert, I would never have picked being a salesman as a career. I was pretty good at it, but I didn\u2019t like it. Then I went to the University of Kansas to get an M.B.A. And your career plan then?", "sentence_answer": "When I got out of school, it was 1972 , and not particularly the best economic time."} +{"question": "What University did the Arthur go to to get a M.B.A.?", "paragraph": "A. We lived in a small house in the Midwest. My dad was killed in the Berlin Crisis \u2014 he was a navigator on a bomber. There was no life insurance. My mom had to raise three boys. We grew up as latchkey kids. We never felt poor, but we always worked hard. I had paper routes, and in high school I actually had a night job in a factory. What kind of factory? It was a plastics molding factory. The thing I remember most is making fly swatters. This big press would make them and then it would open and the fly swatters would pop out, and you had to reach in, grab them and get your hand out before it slammed back again to make the next ones. And where did you go to college? University of Missouri for undergraduate. When I got out of school, it was 1972, and not particularly the best economic time. I got a job selling tools to stores. As an introvert, I would never have picked being a salesman as a career. I was pretty good at it, but I didn\u2019t like it. Then I went to the University of Kansas to get an M.B.A. And your career plan then?", "answer": "University of Kansas", "sentence": "Then I went to the University of Kansas to get an M.B.A.", "paragraph_sentence": "A. We lived in a small house in the Midwest. My dad was killed in the Berlin Crisis \u2014 he was a navigator on a bomber. There was no life insurance. My mom had to raise three boys. We grew up as latchkey kids. We never felt poor, but we always worked hard. I had paper routes, and in high school I actually had a night job in a factory. What kind of factory? It was a plastics molding factory. The thing I remember most is making fly swatters. This big press would make them and then it would open and the fly swatters would pop out, and you had to reach in, grab them and get your hand out before it slammed back again to make the next ones. And where did you go to college? University of Missouri for undergraduate. When I got out of school, it was 1972, and not particularly the best economic time. I got a job selling tools to stores. As an introvert, I would never have picked being a salesman as a career. I was pretty good at it, but I didn\u2019t like it. Then I went to the University of Kansas to get an M.B.A. And your career plan then?", "paragraph_answer": "A. We lived in a small house in the Midwest. My dad was killed in the Berlin Crisis \u2014 he was a navigator on a bomber. There was no life insurance. My mom had to raise three boys. We grew up as latchkey kids. We never felt poor, but we always worked hard. I had paper routes, and in high school I actually had a night job in a factory. What kind of factory? It was a plastics molding factory. The thing I remember most is making fly swatters. This big press would make them and then it would open and the fly swatters would pop out, and you had to reach in, grab them and get your hand out before it slammed back again to make the next ones. And where did you go to college? University of Missouri for undergraduate. When I got out of school, it was 1972, and not particularly the best economic time. I got a job selling tools to stores. As an introvert, I would never have picked being a salesman as a career. I was pretty good at it, but I didn\u2019t like it. Then I went to the University of Kansas to get an M.B.A. And your career plan then?", "sentence_answer": "Then I went to the University of Kansas to get an M.B.A."} +{"question": "When type of engagement will help people be more successful?", "paragraph": "People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company. I don\u2019t know which one to take.\u201d I\u2019ll say, \u201cWhich do you want to do?\u201d They\u2019ll say, \u201cI want to do this one, but the other one is the next step up.\u201d And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d People are successful when they\u2019re intellectually and emotionally engaged as opposed to when they\u2019re checking the box.", "answer": "intellectually and emotionally", "sentence": "People are successful when they\u2019re intellectually and emotionally engaged as opposed to when they\u2019re checking the box.", "paragraph_sentence": "People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company. I don\u2019t know which one to take.\u201d I\u2019ll say, \u201cWhich do you want to do?\u201d They\u2019ll say, \u201cI want to do this one, but the other one is the next step up.\u201d And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d People are successful when they\u2019re intellectually and emotionally engaged as opposed to when they\u2019re checking the box. ", "paragraph_answer": "People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company. I don\u2019t know which one to take.\u201d I\u2019ll say, \u201cWhich do you want to do?\u201d They\u2019ll say, \u201cI want to do this one, but the other one is the next step up.\u201d And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d People are successful when they\u2019re intellectually and emotionally engaged as opposed to when they\u2019re checking the box.", "sentence_answer": "People are successful when they\u2019re intellectually and emotionally engaged as opposed to when they\u2019re checking the box."} +{"question": "Where did the people come from to gain advice?", "paragraph": "People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company. I don\u2019t know which one to take.\u201d I\u2019ll say, \u201cWhich do you want to do?\u201d They\u2019ll say, \u201cI want to do this one, but the other one is the next step up.\u201d And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d People are successful when they\u2019re intellectually and emotionally engaged as opposed to when they\u2019re checking the box.", "answer": "inside Intel", "sentence": "People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company.", "paragraph_sentence": " People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company. I don\u2019t know which one to take.\u201d I\u2019ll say, \u201cWhich do you want to do?\u201d They\u2019ll say, \u201cI want to do this one, but the other one is the next step up.\u201d And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d People are successful when they\u2019re intellectually and emotionally engaged as opposed to when they\u2019re checking the box.", "paragraph_answer": "People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company. I don\u2019t know which one to take.\u201d I\u2019ll say, \u201cWhich do you want to do?\u201d They\u2019ll say, \u201cI want to do this one, but the other one is the next step up.\u201d And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d People are successful when they\u2019re intellectually and emotionally engaged as opposed to when they\u2019re checking the box.", "sentence_answer": "People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company."} +{"question": "What will not wanting to do a job reflect on?", "paragraph": "People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company. I don\u2019t know which one to take.\u201d I\u2019ll say, \u201cWhich do you want to do?\u201d They\u2019ll say, \u201cI want to do this one, but the other one is the next step up.\u201d And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d People are successful when they\u2019re intellectually and emotionally engaged as opposed to when they\u2019re checking the box.", "answer": "your performance.", "sentence": "And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company. I don\u2019t know which one to take.\u201d I\u2019ll say, \u201cWhich do you want to do?\u201d They\u2019ll say, \u201cI want to do this one, but the other one is the next step up.\u201d And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d People are successful when they\u2019re intellectually and emotionally engaged as opposed to when they\u2019re checking the box.", "paragraph_answer": "People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company. I don\u2019t know which one to take.\u201d I\u2019ll say, \u201cWhich do you want to do?\u201d They\u2019ll say, \u201cI want to do this one, but the other one is the next step up.\u201d And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d People are successful when they\u2019re intellectually and emotionally engaged as opposed to when they\u2019re checking the box.", "sentence_answer": "And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d"} +{"question": "What should people feel when they take a job?", "paragraph": "People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company. I don\u2019t know which one to take.\u201d I\u2019ll say, \u201cWhich do you want to do?\u201d They\u2019ll say, \u201cI want to do this one, but the other one is the next step up.\u201d And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d People are successful when they\u2019re intellectually and emotionally engaged as opposed to when they\u2019re checking the box.", "answer": "excited", "sentence": "You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company. I don\u2019t know which one to take.\u201d I\u2019ll say, \u201cWhich do you want to do?\u201d They\u2019ll say, \u201cI want to do this one, but the other one is the next step up.\u201d And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d People are successful when they\u2019re intellectually and emotionally engaged as opposed to when they\u2019re checking the box.", "paragraph_answer": "People inside Intel often come to me for advice, and they might say, \u201cI\u2019ve got these two job offers inside the company. I don\u2019t know which one to take.\u201d I\u2019ll say, \u201cWhich do you want to do?\u201d They\u2019ll say, \u201cI want to do this one, but the other one is the next step up.\u201d And I\u2019ll say: \u201cThe thing I learned is that if you\u2019re not doing the job you want to do, it will reflect on your performance. You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d People are successful when they\u2019re intellectually and emotionally engaged as opposed to when they\u2019re checking the box.", "sentence_answer": "You\u2019re better off to take a job you\u2019re excited about than to do the one you think somebody wants you to do.\u201d"} +{"question": "Who wrote \"For Kenneth Gaburo\"?", "paragraph": "Nate Wooley\u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist. But its presentation of the words is extreme, to say the least. Abstractions of text in music aren\u2019t new. Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d", "answer": "Nate Wooley", "sentence": "Nate Wooley \u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist.", "paragraph_sentence": " Nate Wooley \u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist. But its presentation of the words is extreme, to say the least. Abstractions of text in music aren\u2019t new. Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " Nate Wooley \u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist. But its presentation of the words is extreme, to say the least. Abstractions of text in music aren\u2019t new. Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Nate Wooley \u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist."} +{"question": "Where is the Wild Project located?", "paragraph": "Nate Wooley\u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist. But its presentation of the words is extreme, to say the least. Abstractions of text in music aren\u2019t new. Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d", "answer": "East Village", "sentence": "Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village , I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Nate Wooley\u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist. But its presentation of the words is extreme, to say the least. Abstractions of text in music aren\u2019t new. Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village , I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Nate Wooley\u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist. But its presentation of the words is extreme, to say the least. Abstractions of text in music aren\u2019t new. Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village , I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village , I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d"} +{"question": "Who wrote \"Three Voices\"?", "paragraph": "Nate Wooley\u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist. But its presentation of the words is extreme, to say the least. Abstractions of text in music aren\u2019t new. Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d", "answer": "Morton Feldman", "sentence": "Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman \u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Nate Wooley\u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist. But its presentation of the words is extreme, to say the least. Abstractions of text in music aren\u2019t new. Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman \u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Nate Wooley\u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist. But its presentation of the words is extreme, to say the least. Abstractions of text in music aren\u2019t new. Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman \u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman \u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d"} +{"question": "Who wrote the poem \"wind\"?", "paragraph": "Nate Wooley\u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist. But its presentation of the words is extreme, to say the least. Abstractions of text in music aren\u2019t new. Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d", "answer": "Frank O\u2019Hara", "sentence": "Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara \u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Nate Wooley\u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist. But its presentation of the words is extreme, to say the least. Abstractions of text in music aren\u2019t new. Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara \u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Nate Wooley\u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist. But its presentation of the words is extreme, to say the least. Abstractions of text in music aren\u2019t new. Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara \u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara \u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d"} +{"question": "When was Frank O'Hara's \"Three Voices\" written?", "paragraph": "Nate Wooley\u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist. But its presentation of the words is extreme, to say the least. Abstractions of text in music aren\u2019t new. Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d (1982), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d", "answer": "1982", "sentence": "Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d ( 1982 ), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Nate Wooley\u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist. But its presentation of the words is extreme, to say the least. Abstractions of text in music aren\u2019t new. Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d ( 1982 ), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Nate Wooley\u2019s new work \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d is a setting of a sentence by Mr. Gaburo (1926-93), a searching composer, conductor, pianist and language theorist. But its presentation of the words is extreme, to say the least. Abstractions of text in music aren\u2019t new. Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d ( 1982 ), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Listening to the premiere of \u201cFor Kenneth Gaburo\u201d on Monday evening at the Wild Project in the East Village, I thought of Morton Feldman\u2019s glacial \u201cThree Voices\u201d ( 1982 ), in which long passages repeat and deconstruct, to the point of wordlessness, the opening of Frank O\u2019Hara\u2019s poem \u201cwind\u201d: \u201cWho\u2019d have thought/that snow falls.\u201d"} +{"question": "What private group organized Boston's bid to host the 2024 Summer Olympics?", "paragraph": "But when the teacher looked at it, much of the assignment had not been completed. That was the anticlimactic feeling here Monday, when Boston 2024, the private group organizing the city\u2019s bid to host the 2024 Summer Olympics, put out a much-anticipated report that Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts had asked for by Tuesday. Boston 2024 held a briefing for boosters and the news media Monday morning at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center. It gave out gorgeously produced briefing materials, and officials later briefed the governor.", "answer": "Boston 2024", "sentence": "That was the anticlimactic feeling here Monday, when Boston 2024 , the private group organizing the city\u2019s bid to host the 2024 Summer Olympics, put out a much-anticipated report that Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts had asked for by Tuesday.", "paragraph_sentence": "But when the teacher looked at it, much of the assignment had not been completed. That was the anticlimactic feeling here Monday, when Boston 2024 , the private group organizing the city\u2019s bid to host the 2024 Summer Olympics, put out a much-anticipated report that Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts had asked for by Tuesday. Boston 2024 held a briefing for boosters and the news media Monday morning at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center. It gave out gorgeously produced briefing materials, and officials later briefed the governor.", "paragraph_answer": "But when the teacher looked at it, much of the assignment had not been completed. That was the anticlimactic feeling here Monday, when Boston 2024 , the private group organizing the city\u2019s bid to host the 2024 Summer Olympics, put out a much-anticipated report that Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts had asked for by Tuesday. Boston 2024 held a briefing for boosters and the news media Monday morning at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center. It gave out gorgeously produced briefing materials, and officials later briefed the governor.", "sentence_answer": "That was the anticlimactic feeling here Monday, when Boston 2024 , the private group organizing the city\u2019s bid to host the 2024 Summer Olympics, put out a much-anticipated report that Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts had asked for by Tuesday."} +{"question": "Who requested the report from the private group organizing Boston's bid for the 2024 Summer Olympics?", "paragraph": "But when the teacher looked at it, much of the assignment had not been completed. That was the anticlimactic feeling here Monday, when Boston 2024, the private group organizing the city\u2019s bid to host the 2024 Summer Olympics, put out a much-anticipated report that Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts had asked for by Tuesday. Boston 2024 held a briefing for boosters and the news media Monday morning at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center. It gave out gorgeously produced briefing materials, and officials later briefed the governor.", "answer": "Gov. Charlie Baker", "sentence": "that Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts had asked for by Tuesday.", "paragraph_sentence": "But when the teacher looked at it, much of the assignment had not been completed. That was the anticlimactic feeling here Monday, when Boston 2024, the private group organizing the city\u2019s bid to host the 2024 Summer Olympics, put out a much-anticipated report that Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts had asked for by Tuesday. Boston 2024 held a briefing for boosters and the news media Monday morning at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center. It gave out gorgeously produced briefing materials, and officials later briefed the governor.", "paragraph_answer": "But when the teacher looked at it, much of the assignment had not been completed. That was the anticlimactic feeling here Monday, when Boston 2024, the private group organizing the city\u2019s bid to host the 2024 Summer Olympics, put out a much-anticipated report that Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts had asked for by Tuesday. Boston 2024 held a briefing for boosters and the news media Monday morning at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center. It gave out gorgeously produced briefing materials, and officials later briefed the governor.", "sentence_answer": "that Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts had asked for by Tuesday."} +{"question": "Where was the briefing for boosters and news media held?", "paragraph": "But when the teacher looked at it, much of the assignment had not been completed. That was the anticlimactic feeling here Monday, when Boston 2024, the private group organizing the city\u2019s bid to host the 2024 Summer Olympics, put out a much-anticipated report that Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts had asked for by Tuesday. Boston 2024 held a briefing for boosters and the news media Monday morning at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center. It gave out gorgeously produced briefing materials, and officials later briefed the governor.", "answer": "Boston Convention and Exhibition Center", "sentence": "Boston 2024 held a briefing for boosters and the news media Monday morning at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center .", "paragraph_sentence": "But when the teacher looked at it, much of the assignment had not been completed. That was the anticlimactic feeling here Monday, when Boston 2024, the private group organizing the city\u2019s bid to host the 2024 Summer Olympics, put out a much-anticipated report that Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts had asked for by Tuesday. Boston 2024 held a briefing for boosters and the news media Monday morning at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center . It gave out gorgeously produced briefing materials, and officials later briefed the governor.", "paragraph_answer": "But when the teacher looked at it, much of the assignment had not been completed. That was the anticlimactic feeling here Monday, when Boston 2024, the private group organizing the city\u2019s bid to host the 2024 Summer Olympics, put out a much-anticipated report that Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts had asked for by Tuesday. Boston 2024 held a briefing for boosters and the news media Monday morning at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center . It gave out gorgeously produced briefing materials, and officials later briefed the governor.", "sentence_answer": "Boston 2024 held a briefing for boosters and the news media Monday morning at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center ."} +{"question": "What state is Charlie Baker the Governor of?", "paragraph": "But when the teacher looked at it, much of the assignment had not been completed. That was the anticlimactic feeling here Monday, when Boston 2024, the private group organizing the city\u2019s bid to host the 2024 Summer Olympics, put out a much-anticipated report that Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts had asked for by Tuesday. Boston 2024 held a briefing for boosters and the news media Monday morning at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center. It gave out gorgeously produced briefing materials, and officials later briefed the governor.", "answer": "Massachusetts", "sentence": "That was the anticlimactic feeling here Monday, when Boston 2024, the private group organizing the city\u2019s bid to host the 2024 Summer Olympics, put out a much-anticipated report that Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts had asked for by Tuesday.", "paragraph_sentence": "But when the teacher looked at it, much of the assignment had not been completed. That was the anticlimactic feeling here Monday, when Boston 2024, the private group organizing the city\u2019s bid to host the 2024 Summer Olympics, put out a much-anticipated report that Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts had asked for by Tuesday. Boston 2024 held a briefing for boosters and the news media Monday morning at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center. It gave out gorgeously produced briefing materials, and officials later briefed the governor.", "paragraph_answer": "But when the teacher looked at it, much of the assignment had not been completed. That was the anticlimactic feeling here Monday, when Boston 2024, the private group organizing the city\u2019s bid to host the 2024 Summer Olympics, put out a much-anticipated report that Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts had asked for by Tuesday. Boston 2024 held a briefing for boosters and the news media Monday morning at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center. It gave out gorgeously produced briefing materials, and officials later briefed the governor.", "sentence_answer": "That was the anticlimactic feeling here Monday, when Boston 2024, the private group organizing the city\u2019s bid to host the 2024 Summer Olympics, put out a much-anticipated report that Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts had asked for by Tuesday."} +{"question": "How much money would taxpayers need to raise for the revitalization?", "paragraph": "Their main pitch: The overhauled plan, updated from a widely panned version first offered in January, would generate millions of dollars in new tax revenue, create tens of thousands of new jobs and produce thousands of new housing units, parks and other neighborhood amenities that would provide a lasting legacy. And with taxpayer help, to the tune of more than $700 million, the Games would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system. Officials argued that these were costs that taxpayers would have to bear regardless of whether Boston won the Olympics. The plan went into great detail on how the Games would transform two Boston neighborhoods: Widett Circle, the home of a temporary Olympic Stadium, and Columbia Point, home to the athletes\u2019 village.", "answer": "$700 million", "sentence": "And with taxpayer help, to the tune of more than $700 million , the Games would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system.", "paragraph_sentence": "Their main pitch: The overhauled plan, updated from a widely panned version first offered in January, would generate millions of dollars in new tax revenue, create tens of thousands of new jobs and produce thousands of new housing units, parks and other neighborhood amenities that would provide a lasting legacy. And with taxpayer help, to the tune of more than $700 million , the Games would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system. Officials argued that these were costs that taxpayers would have to bear regardless of whether Boston won the Olympics. The plan went into great detail on how the Games would transform two Boston neighborhoods: Widett Circle, the home of a temporary Olympic Stadium, and Columbia Point, home to the athletes\u2019 village.", "paragraph_answer": "Their main pitch: The overhauled plan, updated from a widely panned version first offered in January, would generate millions of dollars in new tax revenue, create tens of thousands of new jobs and produce thousands of new housing units, parks and other neighborhood amenities that would provide a lasting legacy. And with taxpayer help, to the tune of more than $700 million , the Games would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system. Officials argued that these were costs that taxpayers would have to bear regardless of whether Boston won the Olympics. The plan went into great detail on how the Games would transform two Boston neighborhoods: Widett Circle, the home of a temporary Olympic Stadium, and Columbia Point, home to the athletes\u2019 village.", "sentence_answer": "And with taxpayer help, to the tune of more than $700 million , the Games would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system."} +{"question": "How many new jobs would be created?", "paragraph": "Their main pitch: The overhauled plan, updated from a widely panned version first offered in January, would generate millions of dollars in new tax revenue, create tens of thousands of new jobs and produce thousands of new housing units, parks and other neighborhood amenities that would provide a lasting legacy. And with taxpayer help, to the tune of more than $700 million, the Games would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system. Officials argued that these were costs that taxpayers would have to bear regardless of whether Boston won the Olympics. The plan went into great detail on how the Games would transform two Boston neighborhoods: Widett Circle, the home of a temporary Olympic Stadium, and Columbia Point, home to the athletes\u2019 village.", "answer": "thousands of new jobs", "sentence": "Their main pitch: The overhauled plan, updated from a widely panned version first offered in January, would generate millions of dollars in new tax revenue, create tens of thousands of new jobs and produce thousands of new housing units, parks and other neighborhood amenities that would provide a lasting legacy.", "paragraph_sentence": " Their main pitch: The overhauled plan, updated from a widely panned version first offered in January, would generate millions of dollars in new tax revenue, create tens of thousands of new jobs and produce thousands of new housing units, parks and other neighborhood amenities that would provide a lasting legacy. And with taxpayer help, to the tune of more than $700 million, the Games would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system. Officials argued that these were costs that taxpayers would have to bear regardless of whether Boston won the Olympics. The plan went into great detail on how the Games would transform two Boston neighborhoods: Widett Circle, the home of a temporary Olympic Stadium, and Columbia Point, home to the athletes\u2019 village.", "paragraph_answer": "Their main pitch: The overhauled plan, updated from a widely panned version first offered in January, would generate millions of dollars in new tax revenue, create tens of thousands of new jobs and produce thousands of new housing units, parks and other neighborhood amenities that would provide a lasting legacy. And with taxpayer help, to the tune of more than $700 million, the Games would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system. Officials argued that these were costs that taxpayers would have to bear regardless of whether Boston won the Olympics. The plan went into great detail on how the Games would transform two Boston neighborhoods: Widett Circle, the home of a temporary Olympic Stadium, and Columbia Point, home to the athletes\u2019 village.", "sentence_answer": "Their main pitch: The overhauled plan, updated from a widely panned version first offered in January, would generate millions of dollars in new tax revenue, create tens of thousands of new jobs and produce thousands of new housing units, parks and other neighborhood amenities that would provide a lasting legacy."} +{"question": "How many new housing units would be built?", "paragraph": "Their main pitch: The overhauled plan, updated from a widely panned version first offered in January, would generate millions of dollars in new tax revenue, create tens of thousands of new jobs and produce thousands of new housing units, parks and other neighborhood amenities that would provide a lasting legacy. And with taxpayer help, to the tune of more than $700 million, the Games would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system. Officials argued that these were costs that taxpayers would have to bear regardless of whether Boston won the Olympics. The plan went into great detail on how the Games would transform two Boston neighborhoods: Widett Circle, the home of a temporary Olympic Stadium, and Columbia Point, home to the athletes\u2019 village.", "answer": "thousands", "sentence": "Their main pitch: The overhauled plan, updated from a widely panned version first offered in January, would generate millions of dollars in new tax revenue, create tens of thousands of new jobs and produce thousands of new housing units, parks and other neighborhood amenities that would provide a lasting legacy.", "paragraph_sentence": " Their main pitch: The overhauled plan, updated from a widely panned version first offered in January, would generate millions of dollars in new tax revenue, create tens of thousands of new jobs and produce thousands of new housing units, parks and other neighborhood amenities that would provide a lasting legacy. And with taxpayer help, to the tune of more than $700 million, the Games would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system. Officials argued that these were costs that taxpayers would have to bear regardless of whether Boston won the Olympics. The plan went into great detail on how the Games would transform two Boston neighborhoods: Widett Circle, the home of a temporary Olympic Stadium, and Columbia Point, home to the athletes\u2019 village.", "paragraph_answer": "Their main pitch: The overhauled plan, updated from a widely panned version first offered in January, would generate millions of dollars in new tax revenue, create tens of thousands of new jobs and produce thousands of new housing units, parks and other neighborhood amenities that would provide a lasting legacy. And with taxpayer help, to the tune of more than $700 million, the Games would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system. Officials argued that these were costs that taxpayers would have to bear regardless of whether Boston won the Olympics. The plan went into great detail on how the Games would transform two Boston neighborhoods: Widett Circle, the home of a temporary Olympic Stadium, and Columbia Point, home to the athletes\u2019 village.", "sentence_answer": "Their main pitch: The overhauled plan, updated from a widely panned version first offered in January, would generate millions of dollars in new tax revenue, create tens of thousands of new jobs and produce thousands of new housing units, parks and other neighborhood amenities that would provide a lasting legacy."} +{"question": "What would the games do for Boston?", "paragraph": "Their main pitch: The overhauled plan, updated from a widely panned version first offered in January, would generate millions of dollars in new tax revenue, create tens of thousands of new jobs and produce thousands of new housing units, parks and other neighborhood amenities that would provide a lasting legacy. And with taxpayer help, to the tune of more than $700 million, the Games would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system. Officials argued that these were costs that taxpayers would have to bear regardless of whether Boston won the Olympics. The plan went into great detail on how the Games would transform two Boston neighborhoods: Widett Circle, the home of a temporary Olympic Stadium, and Columbia Point, home to the athletes\u2019 village.", "answer": "spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system", "sentence": "would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system .", "paragraph_sentence": "Their main pitch: The overhauled plan, updated from a widely panned version first offered in January, would generate millions of dollars in new tax revenue, create tens of thousands of new jobs and produce thousands of new housing units, parks and other neighborhood amenities that would provide a lasting legacy. And with taxpayer help, to the tune of more than $700 million, the Games would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system . Officials argued that these were costs that taxpayers would have to bear regardless of whether Boston won the Olympics. The plan went into great detail on how the Games would transform two Boston neighborhoods: Widett Circle, the home of a temporary Olympic Stadium, and Columbia Point, home to the athletes\u2019 village.", "paragraph_answer": "Their main pitch: The overhauled plan, updated from a widely panned version first offered in January, would generate millions of dollars in new tax revenue, create tens of thousands of new jobs and produce thousands of new housing units, parks and other neighborhood amenities that would provide a lasting legacy. And with taxpayer help, to the tune of more than $700 million, the Games would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system . Officials argued that these were costs that taxpayers would have to bear regardless of whether Boston won the Olympics. The plan went into great detail on how the Games would transform two Boston neighborhoods: Widett Circle, the home of a temporary Olympic Stadium, and Columbia Point, home to the athletes\u2019 village.", "sentence_answer": "would spur the much-needed upgrade of the transportation infrastructure, improving local roads as well as the beleaguered subway system ."} +{"question": "Who would front the money to purchase the necessary land?", "paragraph": "The plan envisions enlisting private \u201cmaster developers\u201d who would front the money to buy the necessary land, move existing owners and prepare these two sites. As an incentive, the developers would receive highly generous tax breaks for new construction after the Games. Those tax breaks would be negotiated with the city, but the report suggested that the developer might pay just 15 percent of real estate taxes for the first decade. \u201cThis could be the largest economic development opportunity in our lifetime, in my lifetime, in Boston,\u201d Steve Pagliuca, co-owner of the Boston Celtics and chairman of Boston 2024, said in presenting the plan.", "answer": "master developers", "sentence": "The plan envisions enlisting private \u201c master developers \u201d who would front the money to buy the necessary land, move existing owners and prepare these two sites.", "paragraph_sentence": " The plan envisions enlisting private \u201c master developers \u201d who would front the money to buy the necessary land, move existing owners and prepare these two sites. As an incentive, the developers would receive highly generous tax breaks for new construction after the Games. Those tax breaks would be negotiated with the city, but the report suggested that the developer might pay just 15 percent of real estate taxes for the first decade. \u201cThis could be the largest economic development opportunity in our lifetime, in my lifetime, in Boston,\u201d Steve Pagliuca, co-owner of the Boston Celtics and chairman of Boston 2024, said in presenting the plan.", "paragraph_answer": "The plan envisions enlisting private \u201c master developers \u201d who would front the money to buy the necessary land, move existing owners and prepare these two sites. As an incentive, the developers would receive highly generous tax breaks for new construction after the Games. Those tax breaks would be negotiated with the city, but the report suggested that the developer might pay just 15 percent of real estate taxes for the first decade. \u201cThis could be the largest economic development opportunity in our lifetime, in my lifetime, in Boston,\u201d Steve Pagliuca, co-owner of the Boston Celtics and chairman of Boston 2024, said in presenting the plan.", "sentence_answer": "The plan envisions enlisting private \u201c master developers \u201d who would front the money to buy the necessary land, move existing owners and prepare these two sites."} +{"question": "Who would receive generous tax breaks?", "paragraph": "The plan envisions enlisting private \u201cmaster developers\u201d who would front the money to buy the necessary land, move existing owners and prepare these two sites. As an incentive, the developers would receive highly generous tax breaks for new construction after the Games. Those tax breaks would be negotiated with the city, but the report suggested that the developer might pay just 15 percent of real estate taxes for the first decade. \u201cThis could be the largest economic development opportunity in our lifetime, in my lifetime, in Boston,\u201d Steve Pagliuca, co-owner of the Boston Celtics and chairman of Boston 2024, said in presenting the plan.", "answer": "the developers", "sentence": "As an incentive, the developers would receive highly generous tax breaks for new construction after the Games.", "paragraph_sentence": "The plan envisions enlisting private \u201cmaster developers\u201d who would front the money to buy the necessary land, move existing owners and prepare these two sites. As an incentive, the developers would receive highly generous tax breaks for new construction after the Games. Those tax breaks would be negotiated with the city, but the report suggested that the developer might pay just 15 percent of real estate taxes for the first decade. \u201cThis could be the largest economic development opportunity in our lifetime, in my lifetime, in Boston,\u201d Steve Pagliuca, co-owner of the Boston Celtics and chairman of Boston 2024, said in presenting the plan.", "paragraph_answer": "The plan envisions enlisting private \u201cmaster developers\u201d who would front the money to buy the necessary land, move existing owners and prepare these two sites. As an incentive, the developers would receive highly generous tax breaks for new construction after the Games. Those tax breaks would be negotiated with the city, but the report suggested that the developer might pay just 15 percent of real estate taxes for the first decade. \u201cThis could be the largest economic development opportunity in our lifetime, in my lifetime, in Boston,\u201d Steve Pagliuca, co-owner of the Boston Celtics and chairman of Boston 2024, said in presenting the plan.", "sentence_answer": "As an incentive, the developers would receive highly generous tax breaks for new construction after the Games."} +{"question": "How much might the developer pay in real estate taxes for the first decade?", "paragraph": "The plan envisions enlisting private \u201cmaster developers\u201d who would front the money to buy the necessary land, move existing owners and prepare these two sites. As an incentive, the developers would receive highly generous tax breaks for new construction after the Games. Those tax breaks would be negotiated with the city, but the report suggested that the developer might pay just 15 percent of real estate taxes for the first decade. \u201cThis could be the largest economic development opportunity in our lifetime, in my lifetime, in Boston,\u201d Steve Pagliuca, co-owner of the Boston Celtics and chairman of Boston 2024, said in presenting the plan.", "answer": "15 percent", "sentence": "Those tax breaks would be negotiated with the city, but the report suggested that the developer might pay just 15 percent of real estate taxes for the first decade.", "paragraph_sentence": "The plan envisions enlisting private \u201cmaster developers\u201d who would front the money to buy the necessary land, move existing owners and prepare these two sites. As an incentive, the developers would receive highly generous tax breaks for new construction after the Games. Those tax breaks would be negotiated with the city, but the report suggested that the developer might pay just 15 percent of real estate taxes for the first decade. \u201cThis could be the largest economic development opportunity in our lifetime, in my lifetime, in Boston,\u201d Steve Pagliuca, co-owner of the Boston Celtics and chairman of Boston 2024, said in presenting the plan.", "paragraph_answer": "The plan envisions enlisting private \u201cmaster developers\u201d who would front the money to buy the necessary land, move existing owners and prepare these two sites. As an incentive, the developers would receive highly generous tax breaks for new construction after the Games. Those tax breaks would be negotiated with the city, but the report suggested that the developer might pay just 15 percent of real estate taxes for the first decade. \u201cThis could be the largest economic development opportunity in our lifetime, in my lifetime, in Boston,\u201d Steve Pagliuca, co-owner of the Boston Celtics and chairman of Boston 2024, said in presenting the plan.", "sentence_answer": "Those tax breaks would be negotiated with the city, but the report suggested that the developer might pay just 15 percent of real estate taxes for the first decade."} +{"question": "Who is the chairman of Boston 2024?", "paragraph": "The plan envisions enlisting private \u201cmaster developers\u201d who would front the money to buy the necessary land, move existing owners and prepare these two sites. As an incentive, the developers would receive highly generous tax breaks for new construction after the Games. Those tax breaks would be negotiated with the city, but the report suggested that the developer might pay just 15 percent of real estate taxes for the first decade. \u201cThis could be the largest economic development opportunity in our lifetime, in my lifetime, in Boston,\u201d Steve Pagliuca, co-owner of the Boston Celtics and chairman of Boston 2024, said in presenting the plan.", "answer": "Steve Pagliuca", "sentence": "\u201cThis could be the largest economic development opportunity in our lifetime, in my lifetime, in Boston,\u201d Steve Pagliuca , co-owner of the Boston Celtics and chairman of Boston 2024, said in presenting the plan.", "paragraph_sentence": "The plan envisions enlisting private \u201cmaster developers\u201d who would front the money to buy the necessary land, move existing owners and prepare these two sites. As an incentive, the developers would receive highly generous tax breaks for new construction after the Games. Those tax breaks would be negotiated with the city, but the report suggested that the developer might pay just 15 percent of real estate taxes for the first decade. \u201cThis could be the largest economic development opportunity in our lifetime, in my lifetime, in Boston,\u201d Steve Pagliuca , co-owner of the Boston Celtics and chairman of Boston 2024, said in presenting the plan. ", "paragraph_answer": "The plan envisions enlisting private \u201cmaster developers\u201d who would front the money to buy the necessary land, move existing owners and prepare these two sites. As an incentive, the developers would receive highly generous tax breaks for new construction after the Games. Those tax breaks would be negotiated with the city, but the report suggested that the developer might pay just 15 percent of real estate taxes for the first decade. \u201cThis could be the largest economic development opportunity in our lifetime, in my lifetime, in Boston,\u201d Steve Pagliuca , co-owner of the Boston Celtics and chairman of Boston 2024, said in presenting the plan.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThis could be the largest economic development opportunity in our lifetime, in my lifetime, in Boston,\u201d Steve Pagliuca , co-owner of the Boston Celtics and chairman of Boston 2024, said in presenting the plan."} +{"question": "How much would insurance cost for the project?", "paragraph": "One problem, he said, was the $128 million figure for insurance. \u201cThey don\u2019t explain how they got it and whether it\u2019s sufficient for what they\u2019re talking about,\u201d he said, questioning whether any carrier would provide insurance for cost overruns since they are virtually assured of happening. Mr. Pagliuca said there were willing insurers, and he would have more to say soon. Andrew Zimbalist, a sports economist at Smith College and author of \u201cCircus Maximus: The Economic Gamble Behind Hosting the Olympics and the World Cup,\u201d questioned whether the organizers could get any \u201cmaster developers\u201d to sign on for the village and the stadium. He also said that a temporary Olympic Stadium might be cheaper to build but that it might not offer the luxury boxes and other amenities that would generate more revenue. \u201cIt\u2019s just more smoke and mirrors, as far as I can tell,\u201d he said.", "answer": "$128 million", "sentence": "One problem, he said, was the $128 million figure for insurance.", "paragraph_sentence": " One problem, he said, was the $128 million figure for insurance. \u201cThey don\u2019t explain how they got it and whether it\u2019s sufficient for what they\u2019re talking about,\u201d he said, questioning whether any carrier would provide insurance for cost overruns since they are virtually assured of happening. Mr. Pagliuca said there were willing insurers, and he would have more to say soon. Andrew Zimbalist, a sports economist at Smith College and author of \u201cCircus Maximus: The Economic Gamble Behind Hosting the Olympics and the World Cup,\u201d questioned whether the organizers could get any \u201cmaster developers\u201d to sign on for the village and the stadium. He also said that a temporary Olympic Stadium might be cheaper to build but that it might not offer the luxury boxes and other amenities that would generate more revenue. \u201cIt\u2019s just more smoke and mirrors, as far as I can tell,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "One problem, he said, was the $128 million figure for insurance. \u201cThey don\u2019t explain how they got it and whether it\u2019s sufficient for what they\u2019re talking about,\u201d he said, questioning whether any carrier would provide insurance for cost overruns since they are virtually assured of happening. Mr. Pagliuca said there were willing insurers, and he would have more to say soon. Andrew Zimbalist, a sports economist at Smith College and author of \u201cCircus Maximus: The Economic Gamble Behind Hosting the Olympics and the World Cup,\u201d questioned whether the organizers could get any \u201cmaster developers\u201d to sign on for the village and the stadium. He also said that a temporary Olympic Stadium might be cheaper to build but that it might not offer the luxury boxes and other amenities that would generate more revenue. \u201cIt\u2019s just more smoke and mirrors, as far as I can tell,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "One problem, he said, was the $128 million figure for insurance."} +{"question": "Who questioned whether the organizers could get master developers to sign on?", "paragraph": "One problem, he said, was the $128 million figure for insurance. \u201cThey don\u2019t explain how they got it and whether it\u2019s sufficient for what they\u2019re talking about,\u201d he said, questioning whether any carrier would provide insurance for cost overruns since they are virtually assured of happening. Mr. Pagliuca said there were willing insurers, and he would have more to say soon. Andrew Zimbalist, a sports economist at Smith College and author of \u201cCircus Maximus: The Economic Gamble Behind Hosting the Olympics and the World Cup,\u201d questioned whether the organizers could get any \u201cmaster developers\u201d to sign on for the village and the stadium. He also said that a temporary Olympic Stadium might be cheaper to build but that it might not offer the luxury boxes and other amenities that would generate more revenue. \u201cIt\u2019s just more smoke and mirrors, as far as I can tell,\u201d he said.", "answer": "Andrew Zimbalist", "sentence": "Andrew Zimbalist , a sports economist at Smith College and author of \u201cCircus Maximus: The Economic Gamble Behind Hosting the Olympics and the World Cup,\u201d questioned whether the organizers could get any \u201cmaster developers\u201d to sign on for the village and the stadium.", "paragraph_sentence": "One problem, he said, was the $128 million figure for insurance. \u201cThey don\u2019t explain how they got it and whether it\u2019s sufficient for what they\u2019re talking about,\u201d he said, questioning whether any carrier would provide insurance for cost overruns since they are virtually assured of happening. Mr. Pagliuca said there were willing insurers, and he would have more to say soon. Andrew Zimbalist , a sports economist at Smith College and author of \u201cCircus Maximus: The Economic Gamble Behind Hosting the Olympics and the World Cup,\u201d questioned whether the organizers could get any \u201cmaster developers\u201d to sign on for the village and the stadium. He also said that a temporary Olympic Stadium might be cheaper to build but that it might not offer the luxury boxes and other amenities that would generate more revenue. \u201cIt\u2019s just more smoke and mirrors, as far as I can tell,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "One problem, he said, was the $128 million figure for insurance. \u201cThey don\u2019t explain how they got it and whether it\u2019s sufficient for what they\u2019re talking about,\u201d he said, questioning whether any carrier would provide insurance for cost overruns since they are virtually assured of happening. Mr. Pagliuca said there were willing insurers, and he would have more to say soon. Andrew Zimbalist , a sports economist at Smith College and author of \u201cCircus Maximus: The Economic Gamble Behind Hosting the Olympics and the World Cup,\u201d questioned whether the organizers could get any \u201cmaster developers\u201d to sign on for the village and the stadium. He also said that a temporary Olympic Stadium might be cheaper to build but that it might not offer the luxury boxes and other amenities that would generate more revenue. \u201cIt\u2019s just more smoke and mirrors, as far as I can tell,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": " Andrew Zimbalist , a sports economist at Smith College and author of \u201cCircus Maximus: The Economic Gamble Behind Hosting the Olympics and the World Cup,\u201d questioned whether the organizers could get any \u201cmaster developers\u201d to sign on for the village and the stadium."} +{"question": "Who is Andrew Zimbalist?", "paragraph": "One problem, he said, was the $128 million figure for insurance. \u201cThey don\u2019t explain how they got it and whether it\u2019s sufficient for what they\u2019re talking about,\u201d he said, questioning whether any carrier would provide insurance for cost overruns since they are virtually assured of happening. Mr. Pagliuca said there were willing insurers, and he would have more to say soon. Andrew Zimbalist, a sports economist at Smith College and author of \u201cCircus Maximus: The Economic Gamble Behind Hosting the Olympics and the World Cup,\u201d questioned whether the organizers could get any \u201cmaster developers\u201d to sign on for the village and the stadium. He also said that a temporary Olympic Stadium might be cheaper to build but that it might not offer the luxury boxes and other amenities that would generate more revenue. \u201cIt\u2019s just more smoke and mirrors, as far as I can tell,\u201d he said.", "answer": "a sports economist at Smith College and author of \u201cCircus Maximus: The Economic Gamble Behind Hosting the Olympics and the World Cup,\u201d", "sentence": "Andrew Zimbalist, a sports economist at Smith College and author of \u201cCircus Maximus: The Economic Gamble Behind Hosting the Olympics and the World Cup,\u201d questioned whether the organizers could get any \u201cmaster developers\u201d to sign on for the village and the stadium.", "paragraph_sentence": "One problem, he said, was the $128 million figure for insurance. \u201cThey don\u2019t explain how they got it and whether it\u2019s sufficient for what they\u2019re talking about,\u201d he said, questioning whether any carrier would provide insurance for cost overruns since they are virtually assured of happening. Mr. Pagliuca said there were willing insurers, and he would have more to say soon. Andrew Zimbalist, a sports economist at Smith College and author of \u201cCircus Maximus: The Economic Gamble Behind Hosting the Olympics and the World Cup,\u201d questioned whether the organizers could get any \u201cmaster developers\u201d to sign on for the village and the stadium. He also said that a temporary Olympic Stadium might be cheaper to build but that it might not offer the luxury boxes and other amenities that would generate more revenue. \u201cIt\u2019s just more smoke and mirrors, as far as I can tell,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "One problem, he said, was the $128 million figure for insurance. \u201cThey don\u2019t explain how they got it and whether it\u2019s sufficient for what they\u2019re talking about,\u201d he said, questioning whether any carrier would provide insurance for cost overruns since they are virtually assured of happening. Mr. Pagliuca said there were willing insurers, and he would have more to say soon. Andrew Zimbalist, a sports economist at Smith College and author of \u201cCircus Maximus: The Economic Gamble Behind Hosting the Olympics and the World Cup,\u201d questioned whether the organizers could get any \u201cmaster developers\u201d to sign on for the village and the stadium. He also said that a temporary Olympic Stadium might be cheaper to build but that it might not offer the luxury boxes and other amenities that would generate more revenue. \u201cIt\u2019s just more smoke and mirrors, as far as I can tell,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "Andrew Zimbalist, a sports economist at Smith College and author of \u201cCircus Maximus: The Economic Gamble Behind Hosting the Olympics and the World Cup,\u201d questioned whether the organizers could get any \u201cmaster developers\u201d to sign on for the village and the stadium."} +{"question": "The Olympic Stadium could be built for a smaller figure if what was not included?", "paragraph": "One problem, he said, was the $128 million figure for insurance. \u201cThey don\u2019t explain how they got it and whether it\u2019s sufficient for what they\u2019re talking about,\u201d he said, questioning whether any carrier would provide insurance for cost overruns since they are virtually assured of happening. Mr. Pagliuca said there were willing insurers, and he would have more to say soon. Andrew Zimbalist, a sports economist at Smith College and author of \u201cCircus Maximus: The Economic Gamble Behind Hosting the Olympics and the World Cup,\u201d questioned whether the organizers could get any \u201cmaster developers\u201d to sign on for the village and the stadium. He also said that a temporary Olympic Stadium might be cheaper to build but that it might not offer the luxury boxes and other amenities that would generate more revenue. \u201cIt\u2019s just more smoke and mirrors, as far as I can tell,\u201d he said.", "answer": "luxury boxes and other amenities", "sentence": "He also said that a temporary Olympic Stadium might be cheaper to build but that it might not offer the luxury boxes and other amenities that would generate more revenue.", "paragraph_sentence": "One problem, he said, was the $128 million figure for insurance. \u201cThey don\u2019t explain how they got it and whether it\u2019s sufficient for what they\u2019re talking about,\u201d he said, questioning whether any carrier would provide insurance for cost overruns since they are virtually assured of happening. Mr. Pagliuca said there were willing insurers, and he would have more to say soon. Andrew Zimbalist, a sports economist at Smith College and author of \u201cCircus Maximus: The Economic Gamble Behind Hosting the Olympics and the World Cup,\u201d questioned whether the organizers could get any \u201cmaster developers\u201d to sign on for the village and the stadium. He also said that a temporary Olympic Stadium might be cheaper to build but that it might not offer the luxury boxes and other amenities that would generate more revenue. \u201cIt\u2019s just more smoke and mirrors, as far as I can tell,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "One problem, he said, was the $128 million figure for insurance. \u201cThey don\u2019t explain how they got it and whether it\u2019s sufficient for what they\u2019re talking about,\u201d he said, questioning whether any carrier would provide insurance for cost overruns since they are virtually assured of happening. Mr. Pagliuca said there were willing insurers, and he would have more to say soon. Andrew Zimbalist, a sports economist at Smith College and author of \u201cCircus Maximus: The Economic Gamble Behind Hosting the Olympics and the World Cup,\u201d questioned whether the organizers could get any \u201cmaster developers\u201d to sign on for the village and the stadium. He also said that a temporary Olympic Stadium might be cheaper to build but that it might not offer the luxury boxes and other amenities that would generate more revenue. \u201cIt\u2019s just more smoke and mirrors, as far as I can tell,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "He also said that a temporary Olympic Stadium might be cheaper to build but that it might not offer the luxury boxes and other amenities that would generate more revenue."} +{"question": "What percent did the original Boston 2024 win support of Boston residents?", "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": "36 percent", "sentence": "That initial plan won the support of just 36 percent of Boston residents in March.", "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": "That initial plan won the support of just 36 percent of Boston residents in March."} +{"question": "What cities was Boston picked over in January?", "paragraph": "Boston 2024 has been in a race against time. For its initial bid, the group had not talked with many of the landlords involved before it identified their properties as the sites of Olympic venues. It obscured financial details. It made several other missteps and was not transparent. That initial plan won the support of just 36 percent of Boston residents in March. And so Boston 2024 underwent an overhaul, including a leadership change. Governor Baker, who has remained neutral but skeptical toward the proposal, told the group to produce a new plan by the end of June. Boston 2024 officials unveiled it Monday so they could fly to California that night and meet with United States Olympic Committee officials, who are conducting a board meeting there. Monday\u2019s plan, called Bid 2.0, was seen as Boston\u2019s major chance to convince the U.S.O.C. to stick with Boston, which it picked over Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington in January. The U.S.O.C. must enter its American competitor into the international competition by Sept. 15. If Bid 2.0 fails to generate more enthusiasm than the first iteration, the U.S.O.C. could either drop Boston and mount a last-minute alternative bid with Los Angeles or drop out of the 2024 competition altogether.", "answer": "Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington", "sentence": "Monday\u2019s plan, called Bid 2.0, was seen as Boston\u2019s major chance to convince the U.S.O.C. to stick with Boston, which it picked over Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington in January.", "paragraph_sentence": "Boston 2024 has been in a race against time. For its initial bid, the group had not talked with many of the landlords involved before it identified their properties as the sites of Olympic venues. It obscured financial details. It made several other missteps and was not transparent. That initial plan won the support of just 36 percent of Boston residents in March. And so Boston 2024 underwent an overhaul, including a leadership change. Governor Baker, who has remained neutral but skeptical toward the proposal, told the group to produce a new plan by the end of June. Boston 2024 officials unveiled it Monday so they could fly to California that night and meet with United States Olympic Committee officials, who are conducting a board meeting there. Monday\u2019s plan, called Bid 2.0, was seen as Boston\u2019s major chance to convince the U.S.O.C. to stick with Boston, which it picked over Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington in January. The U.S.O.C. must enter its American competitor into the international competition by Sept. 15. If Bid 2.0 fails to generate more enthusiasm than the first iteration, the U.S.O.C. could either drop Boston and mount a last-minute alternative bid with Los Angeles or drop out of the 2024 competition altogether.", "paragraph_answer": "Boston 2024 has been in a race against time. For its initial bid, the group had not talked with many of the landlords involved before it identified their properties as the sites of Olympic venues. It obscured financial details. It made several other missteps and was not transparent. That initial plan won the support of just 36 percent of Boston residents in March. And so Boston 2024 underwent an overhaul, including a leadership change. Governor Baker, who has remained neutral but skeptical toward the proposal, told the group to produce a new plan by the end of June. Boston 2024 officials unveiled it Monday so they could fly to California that night and meet with United States Olympic Committee officials, who are conducting a board meeting there. Monday\u2019s plan, called Bid 2.0, was seen as Boston\u2019s major chance to convince the U.S.O.C. to stick with Boston, which it picked over Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington in January. The U.S.O.C. must enter its American competitor into the international competition by Sept. 15. If Bid 2.0 fails to generate more enthusiasm than the first iteration, the U.S.O.C. could either drop Boston and mount a last-minute alternative bid with Los Angeles or drop out of the 2024 competition altogether.", "sentence_answer": "Monday\u2019s plan, called Bid 2.0, was seen as Boston\u2019s major chance to convince the U.S.O.C. to stick with Boston, which it picked over Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington in January."} +{"question": "What was the new plan called?", "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": "Boston 2024", "sentence": "Boston 2024 has been in a race against time.", "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": " Boston 2024 has been in a race against time."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What's the name of the next film Ms. Schoenhals is plotting?", "paragraph": "Next Thing Ms. Schoenhals is plotting to wave her viral wand on bigger screens. A film adaptation of \u201cWhite Girl Problems\u201d is in the pipeline from Lionsgate. She would like to turn Cosmo Sex Tips into a half-hour TV show in which \u201cvarious comedians and actors act out the sexy tips,\u201d she said. And she is also writing a TV pilot centered on a young woman in Los Angeles who works at a vintage store that doubles as a drug front. \u201cWhat could be funnier than a bunch of white girls juggling selling drugs and vintage clothing?\u201d she said.", "answer": "film adaptation of \u201cWhite Girl Problems\u201d", "sentence": "A film adaptation of \u201cWhite Girl Problems\u201d is in the pipeline from Lionsgate.", "paragraph_sentence": "Next Thing Ms. Schoenhals is plotting to wave her viral wand on bigger screens. A film adaptation of \u201cWhite Girl Problems\u201d is in the pipeline from Lionsgate. She would like to turn Cosmo Sex Tips into a half-hour TV show in which \u201cvarious comedians and actors act out the sexy tips,\u201d she said. And she is also writing a TV pilot centered on a young woman in Los Angeles who works at a vintage store that doubles as a drug front. \u201cWhat could be funnier than a bunch of white girls juggling selling drugs and vintage clothing?\u201d she said.", "paragraph_answer": "Next Thing Ms. Schoenhals is plotting to wave her viral wand on bigger screens. A film adaptation of \u201cWhite Girl Problems\u201d is in the pipeline from Lionsgate. She would like to turn Cosmo Sex Tips into a half-hour TV show in which \u201cvarious comedians and actors act out the sexy tips,\u201d she said. And she is also writing a TV pilot centered on a young woman in Los Angeles who works at a vintage store that doubles as a drug front. \u201cWhat could be funnier than a bunch of white girls juggling selling drugs and vintage clothing?\u201d she said.", "sentence_answer": "A film adaptation of \u201cWhite Girl Problems\u201d is in the pipeline from Lionsgate."} +{"question": "In what Ms. Schoenhals wants to turn Cosmo Sex Tip?", "paragraph": "Next Thing Ms. Schoenhals is plotting to wave her viral wand on bigger screens. A film adaptation of \u201cWhite Girl Problems\u201d is in the pipeline from Lionsgate. She would like to turn Cosmo Sex Tips into a half-hour TV show in which \u201cvarious comedians and actors act out the sexy tips,\u201d she said. And she is also writing a TV pilot centered on a young woman in Los Angeles who works at a vintage store that doubles as a drug front. \u201cWhat could be funnier than a bunch of white girls juggling selling drugs and vintage clothing?\u201d she said.", "answer": "TV show", "sentence": "She would like to turn Cosmo Sex Tips into a half-hour TV show in which \u201cvarious comedians and actors act out the sexy tips", "paragraph_sentence": "Next Thing Ms. Schoenhals is plotting to wave her viral wand on bigger screens. A film adaptation of \u201cWhite Girl Problems\u201d is in the pipeline from Lionsgate. She would like to turn Cosmo Sex Tips into a half-hour TV show in which \u201cvarious comedians and actors act out the sexy tips ,\u201d she said. And she is also writing a TV pilot centered on a young woman in Los Angeles who works at a vintage store that doubles as a drug front. \u201cWhat could be funnier than a bunch of white girls juggling selling drugs and vintage clothing?\u201d she said.", "paragraph_answer": "Next Thing Ms. Schoenhals is plotting to wave her viral wand on bigger screens. A film adaptation of \u201cWhite Girl Problems\u201d is in the pipeline from Lionsgate. She would like to turn Cosmo Sex Tips into a half-hour TV show in which \u201cvarious comedians and actors act out the sexy tips,\u201d she said. And she is also writing a TV pilot centered on a young woman in Los Angeles who works at a vintage store that doubles as a drug front. \u201cWhat could be funnier than a bunch of white girls juggling selling drugs and vintage clothing?\u201d she said.", "sentence_answer": "She would like to turn Cosmo Sex Tips into a half-hour TV show in which \u201cvarious comedians and actors act out the sexy tips"} +{"question": "In what is Ms. Schoenhals working at the moment?", "paragraph": "Next Thing Ms. Schoenhals is plotting to wave her viral wand on bigger screens. A film adaptation of \u201cWhite Girl Problems\u201d is in the pipeline from Lionsgate. She would like to turn Cosmo Sex Tips into a half-hour TV show in which \u201cvarious comedians and actors act out the sexy tips,\u201d she said. And she is also writing a TV pilot centered on a young woman in Los Angeles who works at a vintage store that doubles as a drug front. \u201cWhat could be funnier than a bunch of white girls juggling selling drugs and vintage clothing?\u201d she said.", "answer": "TV pilot", "sentence": "And she is also writing a TV pilot centered on a young woman in Los Angeles who works at a vintage store that doubles as a drug front.", "paragraph_sentence": "Next Thing Ms. Schoenhals is plotting to wave her viral wand on bigger screens. A film adaptation of \u201cWhite Girl Problems\u201d is in the pipeline from Lionsgate. She would like to turn Cosmo Sex Tips into a half-hour TV show in which \u201cvarious comedians and actors act out the sexy tips,\u201d she said. And she is also writing a TV pilot centered on a young woman in Los Angeles who works at a vintage store that doubles as a drug front. \u201cWhat could be funnier than a bunch of white girls juggling selling drugs and vintage clothing?\u201d she said.", "paragraph_answer": "Next Thing Ms. Schoenhals is plotting to wave her viral wand on bigger screens. A film adaptation of \u201cWhite Girl Problems\u201d is in the pipeline from Lionsgate. She would like to turn Cosmo Sex Tips into a half-hour TV show in which \u201cvarious comedians and actors act out the sexy tips,\u201d she said. And she is also writing a TV pilot centered on a young woman in Los Angeles who works at a vintage store that doubles as a drug front. \u201cWhat could be funnier than a bunch of white girls juggling selling drugs and vintage clothing?\u201d she said.", "sentence_answer": "And she is also writing a TV pilot centered on a young woman in Los Angeles who works at a vintage store that doubles as a drug front."} +{"question": "Who is Ms. Schoenhals thinking about acting on Cosmo Sex Tip?", "paragraph": "Next Thing Ms. Schoenhals is plotting to wave her viral wand on bigger screens. A film adaptation of \u201cWhite Girl Problems\u201d is in the pipeline from Lionsgate. She would like to turn Cosmo Sex Tips into a half-hour TV show in which \u201cvarious comedians and actors act out the sexy tips,\u201d she said. And she is also writing a TV pilot centered on a young woman in Los Angeles who works at a vintage store that doubles as a drug front. \u201cWhat could be funnier than a bunch of white girls juggling selling drugs and vintage clothing?\u201d she said.", "answer": "comedians and actors", "sentence": "She would like to turn Cosmo Sex Tips into a half-hour TV show in which \u201cvarious comedians and actors act out the sexy tips,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Next Thing Ms. Schoenhals is plotting to wave her viral wand on bigger screens. A film adaptation of \u201cWhite Girl Problems\u201d is in the pipeline from Lionsgate. She would like to turn Cosmo Sex Tips into a half-hour TV show in which \u201cvarious comedians and actors act out the sexy tips,\u201d she said. And she is also writing a TV pilot centered on a young woman in Los Angeles who works at a vintage store that doubles as a drug front. \u201cWhat could be funnier than a bunch of white girls juggling selling drugs and vintage clothing?\u201d she said.", "paragraph_answer": "Next Thing Ms. Schoenhals is plotting to wave her viral wand on bigger screens. A film adaptation of \u201cWhite Girl Problems\u201d is in the pipeline from Lionsgate. She would like to turn Cosmo Sex Tips into a half-hour TV show in which \u201cvarious comedians and actors act out the sexy tips,\u201d she said. And she is also writing a TV pilot centered on a young woman in Los Angeles who works at a vintage store that doubles as a drug front. \u201cWhat could be funnier than a bunch of white girls juggling selling drugs and vintage clothing?\u201d she said.", "sentence_answer": "She would like to turn Cosmo Sex Tips into a half-hour TV show in which \u201cvarious comedians and actors act out the sexy tips,\u201d she said."} +{"question": "What quandary is the United States looking for an answer too?", "paragraph": "The origins of the Nazi dictatorship are to be found in the authoritarian legacy of the German Empire, the inability to cope with the defeat in World War I and the failure to achieve political compromise during the Weimar Republic. When it comes to explaining the Holocaust, Germans inquire about the place of anti-Semitism and xenophobia in their society and about the psychological and cultural factors that led ordinary citizens to participate in, or to accept, horrific atrocities. They understand their own history well enough to avoid being distracted by demagogy about gun control. If the United States is going to arrive at a workable compromise solution to its gun problem, it will not be accomplished through the use of historical analogies that are false, silly and insulting. Similarly, coming to terms with a civilizational breach of the magnitude of the Holocaust requires a serious encounter with history, rather than political sloganeering that exploits history as a prop for mobilizing one\u2019s base.", "answer": "its gun problem", "sentence": "If the United States is going to arrive at a workable compromise solution to its gun problem , it will not be accomplished through the use of historical analogies that are false, silly and insulting.", "paragraph_sentence": "The origins of the Nazi dictatorship are to be found in the authoritarian legacy of the German Empire, the inability to cope with the defeat in World War I and the failure to achieve political compromise during the Weimar Republic. When it comes to explaining the Holocaust, Germans inquire about the place of anti-Semitism and xenophobia in their society and about the psychological and cultural factors that led ordinary citizens to participate in, or to accept, horrific atrocities. They understand their own history well enough to avoid being distracted by demagogy about gun control. If the United States is going to arrive at a workable compromise solution to its gun problem , it will not be accomplished through the use of historical analogies that are false, silly and insulting. Similarly, coming to terms with a civilizational breach of the magnitude of the Holocaust requires a serious encounter with history, rather than political sloganeering that exploits history as a prop for mobilizing one\u2019s base.", "paragraph_answer": "The origins of the Nazi dictatorship are to be found in the authoritarian legacy of the German Empire, the inability to cope with the defeat in World War I and the failure to achieve political compromise during the Weimar Republic. When it comes to explaining the Holocaust, Germans inquire about the place of anti-Semitism and xenophobia in their society and about the psychological and cultural factors that led ordinary citizens to participate in, or to accept, horrific atrocities. They understand their own history well enough to avoid being distracted by demagogy about gun control. If the United States is going to arrive at a workable compromise solution to its gun problem , it will not be accomplished through the use of historical analogies that are false, silly and insulting. Similarly, coming to terms with a civilizational breach of the magnitude of the Holocaust requires a serious encounter with history, rather than political sloganeering that exploits history as a prop for mobilizing one\u2019s base.", "sentence_answer": "If the United States is going to arrive at a workable compromise solution to its gun problem , it will not be accomplished through the use of historical analogies that are false, silly and insulting."} +{"question": "What do Germans try to explain by looking to their past?", "paragraph": "The origins of the Nazi dictatorship are to be found in the authoritarian legacy of the German Empire, the inability to cope with the defeat in World War I and the failure to achieve political compromise during the Weimar Republic. When it comes to explaining the Holocaust, Germans inquire about the place of anti-Semitism and xenophobia in their society and about the psychological and cultural factors that led ordinary citizens to participate in, or to accept, horrific atrocities. They understand their own history well enough to avoid being distracted by demagogy about gun control. If the United States is going to arrive at a workable compromise solution to its gun problem, it will not be accomplished through the use of historical analogies that are false, silly and insulting. Similarly, coming to terms with a civilizational breach of the magnitude of the Holocaust requires a serious encounter with history, rather than political sloganeering that exploits history as a prop for mobilizing one\u2019s base.", "answer": "the place of anti-Semitism and xenophobia in their society", "sentence": "When it comes to explaining the Holocaust, Germans inquire about the place of anti-Semitism and xenophobia in their society and about the psychological and cultural factors that led ordinary citizens to participate in, or to accept, horrific atrocities.", "paragraph_sentence": "The origins of the Nazi dictatorship are to be found in the authoritarian legacy of the German Empire, the inability to cope with the defeat in World War I and the failure to achieve political compromise during the Weimar Republic. When it comes to explaining the Holocaust, Germans inquire about the place of anti-Semitism and xenophobia in their society and about the psychological and cultural factors that led ordinary citizens to participate in, or to accept, horrific atrocities. They understand their own history well enough to avoid being distracted by demagogy about gun control. If the United States is going to arrive at a workable compromise solution to its gun problem, it will not be accomplished through the use of historical analogies that are false, silly and insulting. Similarly, coming to terms with a civilizational breach of the magnitude of the Holocaust requires a serious encounter with history, rather than political sloganeering that exploits history as a prop for mobilizing one\u2019s base.", "paragraph_answer": "The origins of the Nazi dictatorship are to be found in the authoritarian legacy of the German Empire, the inability to cope with the defeat in World War I and the failure to achieve political compromise during the Weimar Republic. When it comes to explaining the Holocaust, Germans inquire about the place of anti-Semitism and xenophobia in their society and about the psychological and cultural factors that led ordinary citizens to participate in, or to accept, horrific atrocities. They understand their own history well enough to avoid being distracted by demagogy about gun control. If the United States is going to arrive at a workable compromise solution to its gun problem, it will not be accomplished through the use of historical analogies that are false, silly and insulting. Similarly, coming to terms with a civilizational breach of the magnitude of the Holocaust requires a serious encounter with history, rather than political sloganeering that exploits history as a prop for mobilizing one\u2019s base.", "sentence_answer": "When it comes to explaining the Holocaust, Germans inquire about the place of anti-Semitism and xenophobia in their society and about the psychological and cultural factors that led ordinary citizens to participate in, or to accept, horrific atrocities."} +{"question": "What was the German Empire not able to deal with?", "paragraph": "The origins of the Nazi dictatorship are to be found in the authoritarian legacy of the German Empire, the inability to cope with the defeat in World War I and the failure to achieve political compromise during the Weimar Republic. When it comes to explaining the Holocaust, Germans inquire about the place of anti-Semitism and xenophobia in their society and about the psychological and cultural factors that led ordinary citizens to participate in, or to accept, horrific atrocities. They understand their own history well enough to avoid being distracted by demagogy about gun control. If the United States is going to arrive at a workable compromise solution to its gun problem, it will not be accomplished through the use of historical analogies that are false, silly and insulting. Similarly, coming to terms with a civilizational breach of the magnitude of the Holocaust requires a serious encounter with history, rather than political sloganeering that exploits history as a prop for mobilizing one\u2019s base.", "answer": "defeat in World War I", "sentence": "The origins of the Nazi dictatorship are to be found in the authoritarian legacy of the German Empire, the inability to cope with the defeat in World War I and the failure to achieve political compromise during the Weimar Republic.", "paragraph_sentence": " The origins of the Nazi dictatorship are to be found in the authoritarian legacy of the German Empire, the inability to cope with the defeat in World War I and the failure to achieve political compromise during the Weimar Republic. When it comes to explaining the Holocaust, Germans inquire about the place of anti-Semitism and xenophobia in their society and about the psychological and cultural factors that led ordinary citizens to participate in, or to accept, horrific atrocities. They understand their own history well enough to avoid being distracted by demagogy about gun control. If the United States is going to arrive at a workable compromise solution to its gun problem, it will not be accomplished through the use of historical analogies that are false, silly and insulting. Similarly, coming to terms with a civilizational breach of the magnitude of the Holocaust requires a serious encounter with history, rather than political sloganeering that exploits history as a prop for mobilizing one\u2019s base.", "paragraph_answer": "The origins of the Nazi dictatorship are to be found in the authoritarian legacy of the German Empire, the inability to cope with the defeat in World War I and the failure to achieve political compromise during the Weimar Republic. When it comes to explaining the Holocaust, Germans inquire about the place of anti-Semitism and xenophobia in their society and about the psychological and cultural factors that led ordinary citizens to participate in, or to accept, horrific atrocities. They understand their own history well enough to avoid being distracted by demagogy about gun control. If the United States is going to arrive at a workable compromise solution to its gun problem, it will not be accomplished through the use of historical analogies that are false, silly and insulting. Similarly, coming to terms with a civilizational breach of the magnitude of the Holocaust requires a serious encounter with history, rather than political sloganeering that exploits history as a prop for mobilizing one\u2019s base.", "sentence_answer": "The origins of the Nazi dictatorship are to be found in the authoritarian legacy of the German Empire, the inability to cope with the defeat in World War I and the failure to achieve political compromise during the Weimar Republic."} +{"question": "By understanding their own history what can Germany avoid being distracted about?", "paragraph": "The origins of the Nazi dictatorship are to be found in the authoritarian legacy of the German Empire, the inability to cope with the defeat in World War I and the failure to achieve political compromise during the Weimar Republic. When it comes to explaining the Holocaust, Germans inquire about the place of anti-Semitism and xenophobia in their society and about the psychological and cultural factors that led ordinary citizens to participate in, or to accept, horrific atrocities. They understand their own history well enough to avoid being distracted by demagogy about gun control. If the United States is going to arrive at a workable compromise solution to its gun problem, it will not be accomplished through the use of historical analogies that are false, silly and insulting. Similarly, coming to terms with a civilizational breach of the magnitude of the Holocaust requires a serious encounter with history, rather than political sloganeering that exploits history as a prop for mobilizing one\u2019s base.", "answer": "gun control", "sentence": "They understand their own history well enough to avoid being distracted by demagogy about gun control .", "paragraph_sentence": "The origins of the Nazi dictatorship are to be found in the authoritarian legacy of the German Empire, the inability to cope with the defeat in World War I and the failure to achieve political compromise during the Weimar Republic. When it comes to explaining the Holocaust, Germans inquire about the place of anti-Semitism and xenophobia in their society and about the psychological and cultural factors that led ordinary citizens to participate in, or to accept, horrific atrocities. They understand their own history well enough to avoid being distracted by demagogy about gun control . If the United States is going to arrive at a workable compromise solution to its gun problem, it will not be accomplished through the use of historical analogies that are false, silly and insulting. Similarly, coming to terms with a civilizational breach of the magnitude of the Holocaust requires a serious encounter with history, rather than political sloganeering that exploits history as a prop for mobilizing one\u2019s base.", "paragraph_answer": "The origins of the Nazi dictatorship are to be found in the authoritarian legacy of the German Empire, the inability to cope with the defeat in World War I and the failure to achieve political compromise during the Weimar Republic. When it comes to explaining the Holocaust, Germans inquire about the place of anti-Semitism and xenophobia in their society and about the psychological and cultural factors that led ordinary citizens to participate in, or to accept, horrific atrocities. They understand their own history well enough to avoid being distracted by demagogy about gun control . If the United States is going to arrive at a workable compromise solution to its gun problem, it will not be accomplished through the use of historical analogies that are false, silly and insulting. Similarly, coming to terms with a civilizational breach of the magnitude of the Holocaust requires a serious encounter with history, rather than political sloganeering that exploits history as a prop for mobilizing one\u2019s base.", "sentence_answer": "They understand their own history well enough to avoid being distracted by demagogy about gun control ."} +{"question": "What should the United States not use to find a solution to gun control?", "paragraph": "The origins of the Nazi dictatorship are to be found in the authoritarian legacy of the German Empire, the inability to cope with the defeat in World War I and the failure to achieve political compromise during the Weimar Republic. When it comes to explaining the Holocaust, Germans inquire about the place of anti-Semitism and xenophobia in their society and about the psychological and cultural factors that led ordinary citizens to participate in, or to accept, horrific atrocities. They understand their own history well enough to avoid being distracted by demagogy about gun control. If the United States is going to arrive at a workable compromise solution to its gun problem, it will not be accomplished through the use of historical analogies that are false, silly and insulting. Similarly, coming to terms with a civilizational breach of the magnitude of the Holocaust requires a serious encounter with history, rather than political sloganeering that exploits history as a prop for mobilizing one\u2019s base.", "answer": "historical analogies", "sentence": "If the United States is going to arrive at a workable compromise solution to its gun problem, it will not be accomplished through the use of historical analogies that are false, silly and insulting.", "paragraph_sentence": "The origins of the Nazi dictatorship are to be found in the authoritarian legacy of the German Empire, the inability to cope with the defeat in World War I and the failure to achieve political compromise during the Weimar Republic. When it comes to explaining the Holocaust, Germans inquire about the place of anti-Semitism and xenophobia in their society and about the psychological and cultural factors that led ordinary citizens to participate in, or to accept, horrific atrocities. They understand their own history well enough to avoid being distracted by demagogy about gun control. If the United States is going to arrive at a workable compromise solution to its gun problem, it will not be accomplished through the use of historical analogies that are false, silly and insulting. Similarly, coming to terms with a civilizational breach of the magnitude of the Holocaust requires a serious encounter with history, rather than political sloganeering that exploits history as a prop for mobilizing one\u2019s base.", "paragraph_answer": "The origins of the Nazi dictatorship are to be found in the authoritarian legacy of the German Empire, the inability to cope with the defeat in World War I and the failure to achieve political compromise during the Weimar Republic. When it comes to explaining the Holocaust, Germans inquire about the place of anti-Semitism and xenophobia in their society and about the psychological and cultural factors that led ordinary citizens to participate in, or to accept, horrific atrocities. They understand their own history well enough to avoid being distracted by demagogy about gun control. If the United States is going to arrive at a workable compromise solution to its gun problem, it will not be accomplished through the use of historical analogies that are false, silly and insulting. Similarly, coming to terms with a civilizational breach of the magnitude of the Holocaust requires a serious encounter with history, rather than political sloganeering that exploits history as a prop for mobilizing one\u2019s base.", "sentence_answer": "If the United States is going to arrive at a workable compromise solution to its gun problem, it will not be accomplished through the use of historical analogies that are false, silly and insulting."} +{"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."} +{"question": "where is the conflict?", "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": "Ukraine", "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."} +{"question": "Who is the acting director of the Office of Foreign Assets?", "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": "John E. Smith", "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."} +{"question": "Who is the ruler of russia", "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": "Mr. Putin", "sentence": "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_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": "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."} +{"question": "On what day did the School of American Ballet hold its Winter Ball?", "paragraph": "The School of American Ballet held its annual Winter Ball on Monday night, and absolutely no one seemed to mind that it felt more like spring. In a cocktail area in the front of the David H. Koch Theater in Lincoln Center, guests primped and posed in floor-length gowns. Hair was sprayed to perfection, and many of the faces did not appear to move. A young crowd this was not. But perhaps the most surprising thing about the evening was that while David H. Koch and his wife, Julia, held court in one area of the lobby, Chelsea Clinton was in another. Ballet apparently makes for strange bedfellows. Mr. Koch, the conservative billionaire who oversees a well-funded political network, said he has met the Clintons before, including at a benefit last year for the Wildlife Conservation Society.", "answer": "Monday", "sentence": "The School of American Ballet held its annual Winter Ball on Monday night, and absolutely no one seemed to mind that it felt more like spring.", "paragraph_sentence": " The School of American Ballet held its annual Winter Ball on Monday night, and absolutely no one seemed to mind that it felt more like spring. In a cocktail area in the front of the David H. Koch Theater in Lincoln Center, guests primped and posed in floor-length gowns. Hair was sprayed to perfection, and many of the faces did not appear to move. A young crowd this was not. But perhaps the most surprising thing about the evening was that while David H. Koch and his wife, Julia, held court in one area of the lobby, Chelsea Clinton was in another. Ballet apparently makes for strange bedfellows. Mr. Koch, the conservative billionaire who oversees a well-funded political network, said he has met the Clintons before, including at a benefit last year for the Wildlife Conservation Society.", "paragraph_answer": "The School of American Ballet held its annual Winter Ball on Monday night, and absolutely no one seemed to mind that it felt more like spring. In a cocktail area in the front of the David H. Koch Theater in Lincoln Center, guests primped and posed in floor-length gowns. Hair was sprayed to perfection, and many of the faces did not appear to move. A young crowd this was not. But perhaps the most surprising thing about the evening was that while David H. Koch and his wife, Julia, held court in one area of the lobby, Chelsea Clinton was in another. Ballet apparently makes for strange bedfellows. Mr. Koch, the conservative billionaire who oversees a well-funded political network, said he has met the Clintons before, including at a benefit last year for the Wildlife Conservation Society.", "sentence_answer": "The School of American Ballet held its annual Winter Ball on Monday night, and absolutely no one seemed to mind that it felt more like spring."} +{"question": "In what theater did the School of American Ballet hold its Winter Ball?", "paragraph": "The School of American Ballet held its annual Winter Ball on Monday night, and absolutely no one seemed to mind that it felt more like spring. In a cocktail area in the front of the David H. Koch Theater in Lincoln Center, guests primped and posed in floor-length gowns. Hair was sprayed to perfection, and many of the faces did not appear to move. A young crowd this was not. But perhaps the most surprising thing about the evening was that while David H. Koch and his wife, Julia, held court in one area of the lobby, Chelsea Clinton was in another. Ballet apparently makes for strange bedfellows. Mr. Koch, the conservative billionaire who oversees a well-funded political network, said he has met the Clintons before, including at a benefit last year for the Wildlife Conservation Society.", "answer": "David H. Koch Theater", "sentence": "In a cocktail area in the front of the David H. Koch Theater in Lincoln Center, guests primped and posed in floor-length gowns.", "paragraph_sentence": "The School of American Ballet held its annual Winter Ball on Monday night, and absolutely no one seemed to mind that it felt more like spring. In a cocktail area in the front of the David H. Koch Theater in Lincoln Center, guests primped and posed in floor-length gowns. Hair was sprayed to perfection, and many of the faces did not appear to move. A young crowd this was not. But perhaps the most surprising thing about the evening was that while David H. Koch and his wife, Julia, held court in one area of the lobby, Chelsea Clinton was in another. Ballet apparently makes for strange bedfellows. Mr. Koch, the conservative billionaire who oversees a well-funded political network, said he has met the Clintons before, including at a benefit last year for the Wildlife Conservation Society.", "paragraph_answer": "The School of American Ballet held its annual Winter Ball on Monday night, and absolutely no one seemed to mind that it felt more like spring. In a cocktail area in the front of the David H. Koch Theater in Lincoln Center, guests primped and posed in floor-length gowns. Hair was sprayed to perfection, and many of the faces did not appear to move. A young crowd this was not. But perhaps the most surprising thing about the evening was that while David H. Koch and his wife, Julia, held court in one area of the lobby, Chelsea Clinton was in another. Ballet apparently makes for strange bedfellows. Mr. Koch, the conservative billionaire who oversees a well-funded political network, said he has met the Clintons before, including at a benefit last year for the Wildlife Conservation Society.", "sentence_answer": "In a cocktail area in the front of the David H. Koch Theater in Lincoln Center, guests primped and posed in floor-length gowns."} +{"question": "What is the name of the daughter of the famous Democratic presidential candidate that attended the Winter Ball?", "paragraph": "The School of American Ballet held its annual Winter Ball on Monday night, and absolutely no one seemed to mind that it felt more like spring. In a cocktail area in the front of the David H. Koch Theater in Lincoln Center, guests primped and posed in floor-length gowns. Hair was sprayed to perfection, and many of the faces did not appear to move. A young crowd this was not. But perhaps the most surprising thing about the evening was that while David H. Koch and his wife, Julia, held court in one area of the lobby, Chelsea Clinton was in another. Ballet apparently makes for strange bedfellows. Mr. Koch, the conservative billionaire who oversees a well-funded political network, said he has met the Clintons before, including at a benefit last year for the Wildlife Conservation Society.", "answer": "Chelsea Clinton", "sentence": "But perhaps the most surprising thing about the evening was that while David H. Koch and his wife, Julia, held court in one area of the lobby, Chelsea Clinton was in another.", "paragraph_sentence": "The School of American Ballet held its annual Winter Ball on Monday night, and absolutely no one seemed to mind that it felt more like spring. In a cocktail area in the front of the David H. Koch Theater in Lincoln Center, guests primped and posed in floor-length gowns. Hair was sprayed to perfection, and many of the faces did not appear to move. A young crowd this was not. But perhaps the most surprising thing about the evening was that while David H. Koch and his wife, Julia, held court in one area of the lobby, Chelsea Clinton was in another. Ballet apparently makes for strange bedfellows. Mr. Koch, the conservative billionaire who oversees a well-funded political network, said he has met the Clintons before, including at a benefit last year for the Wildlife Conservation Society.", "paragraph_answer": "The School of American Ballet held its annual Winter Ball on Monday night, and absolutely no one seemed to mind that it felt more like spring. In a cocktail area in the front of the David H. Koch Theater in Lincoln Center, guests primped and posed in floor-length gowns. Hair was sprayed to perfection, and many of the faces did not appear to move. A young crowd this was not. But perhaps the most surprising thing about the evening was that while David H. Koch and his wife, Julia, held court in one area of the lobby, Chelsea Clinton was in another. Ballet apparently makes for strange bedfellows. Mr. Koch, the conservative billionaire who oversees a well-funded political network, said he has met the Clintons before, including at a benefit last year for the Wildlife Conservation Society.", "sentence_answer": "But perhaps the most surprising thing about the evening was that while David H. Koch and his wife, Julia, held court in one area of the lobby, Chelsea Clinton was in another."} +{"question": "What is the name of Joe Swanberg's new feature?", "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": "Digging for Fire", "sentence": "\u201c Digging for Fire ,\u201d Joe Swanberg\u2019s new feature is, like many of his previous movies, a case study in heterosexual ethics.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201c Digging 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": "\u201c Digging 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": "\u201c Digging for Fire ,\u201d Joe Swanberg\u2019s new feature is, like many of his previous movies, a case study in heterosexual ethics."} +{"question": "Which actor gets naked in Digging for Fire?", "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": "Chris Messina", "sentence": "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).", "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": "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)."} +{"question": "What kind of hair style does Orlando Bloom appear with?", "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": "man-bun", "sentence": "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_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": "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."} +{"question": "What kind of case study is Swanberg's new feature?", "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": "heterosexual ethics", "sentence": "\u201cDigging for Fire,\u201d Joe Swanberg\u2019s new feature is, like many of his previous movies, a case study in heterosexual ethics .", "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": "\u201cDigging for Fire,\u201d Joe Swanberg\u2019s new feature is, like many of his previous movies, a case study in heterosexual ethics ."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What is Joe Swanberg's new movie, \"Digging for Fire\", a case study of?", "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": "heterosexual ethics", "sentence": "\u201cDigging for Fire,\u201d Joe Swanberg\u2019s new feature is, like many of his previous movies, a case study in heterosexual ethics .", "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": "\u201cDigging for Fire,\u201d Joe Swanberg\u2019s new feature is, like many of his previous movies, a case study in heterosexual ethics ."} +{"question": "Which actor gets naked in Joe Swanberg's new movie, \"Digging for Fire\"?", "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": "Chris Messina", "sentence": "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).", "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": "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)."} +{"question": "Which actor wears a man-bun in Joe Swanberg's new movie, \"Digging for Fire\"?", "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": "Orlando Bloom", "sentence": "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_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": " 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."} +{"question": "What is the name of Joe Swanberg's latest movie?", "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": "Digging for Fire", "sentence": "\u201c Digging for Fire ,\u201d Joe Swanberg\u2019s new feature is, like many of his previous movies, a case study in heterosexual ethics.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201c Digging 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": "\u201c Digging 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": "\u201c Digging for Fire ,\u201d Joe Swanberg\u2019s new feature is, like many of his previous movies, a case study in heterosexual ethics."} +{"question": "Who is the Director for the movie, \"Digging for Fire\"?", "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": "Joe Swanberg", "sentence": "\u201cDigging for Fire,\u201d Joe Swanberg \u2019s new feature is, like many of his previous movies, a case study in heterosexual ethics.", "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": "\u201cDigging for Fire,\u201d Joe Swanberg \u2019s new feature is, like many of his previous movies, a case study in heterosexual ethics."} +{"question": "What is the abiding interest that Joe Swanberg shares with Woody Allen?", "paragraph": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground. His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis. Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility. They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "answer": "the swerves and reversals of romance", "sentence": "Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance , but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground.", "paragraph_sentence": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance , but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground. His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis. Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility. They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "paragraph_answer": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance , but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground. His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis. Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility. They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance , but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground."} +{"question": "How are Joe Swanberg's character investigations different from Woody Allen's character investigations?", "paragraph": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground. His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis. Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility. They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "answer": "firmer moral and philosophical ground", "sentence": "Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground .", "paragraph_sentence": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground . His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis. Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility. They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "paragraph_answer": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground . His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis. Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility. They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground ."} +{"question": "What do Woody Allen's characters evince?", "paragraph": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground. His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis. Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility. They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "answer": "eloquent neurosis", "sentence": "His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis .", "paragraph_sentence": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground. His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis . Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility. They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "paragraph_answer": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground. His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis . Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility. They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "sentence_answer": "His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis ."} +{"question": "What do Joe Swanberg's characters evince?", "paragraph": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground. His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis. Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility. They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "answer": "mumbling anomie", "sentence": "His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis.", "paragraph_sentence": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground. His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis. Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility. They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "paragraph_answer": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground. His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis. Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility. They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "sentence_answer": "His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis."} +{"question": "What do Joe Swanberg's characters struggle with?", "paragraph": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground. His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis. Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility. They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "answer": "the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility", "sentence": "Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility .", "paragraph_sentence": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground. His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis. Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility . They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "paragraph_answer": "You might almost mistake this for a middle- or late-period Woody Allen movie, in other words. Mr. Swanberg shares Mr. Allen\u2019s abiding interest in the swerves and reversals of romance, but he conducts his investigations on firmer moral and philosophical ground. His characters evince mumbling anomie rather than eloquent neurosis. Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility . They want to be cool, fun, laid back and nonjudgmental, but they also want to behave decently.", "sentence_answer": "Their conversation is stripped of cultural references and instead of grappling with the meaning of existence they struggle with the competing demands of hedonism and responsibility ."} +{"question": "Where does Lee drop Jude off at?", "paragraph": "To say that their marriage is in trouble would be an exaggeration, but there are tiny cracks in it through which trouble might enter. They spend most of the movie apart. Lee drops Jude off at his grandparents\u2019 house so she can spend a night out with friends. Tim stays behind and involves himself in a bizarre project. He has unearthed a rusty gun and a possibly human bone from a patch of dirt on the far side of the swimming pool, and over the next 24 hours his curiosity blossoms into obsession. He becomes an amateur detective and forensic archaeologist, and also, without quite realizing it, a man digging himself ever deeper into an existential hole. But in the meantime, he has some fun. A few pals show up to drink beer, swim and wield shovels. One (Mike Birbiglia) is the uptight guy. Another (Sam Rockwell) is the party guy, who brings cocaine, unattached women and an even wilder buddy (Mr. Messina).", "answer": "his grandparents\u2019 house", "sentence": "Lee drops Jude off at his grandparents\u2019 house so she can spend a night out with friends.", "paragraph_sentence": "To say that their marriage is in trouble would be an exaggeration, but there are tiny cracks in it through which trouble might enter. They spend most of the movie apart. Lee drops Jude off at his grandparents\u2019 house so she can spend a night out with friends. Tim stays behind and involves himself in a bizarre project. He has unearthed a rusty gun and a possibly human bone from a patch of dirt on the far side of the swimming pool, and over the next 24 hours his curiosity blossoms into obsession. He becomes an amateur detective and forensic archaeologist, and also, without quite realizing it, a man digging himself ever deeper into an existential hole. But in the meantime, he has some fun. A few pals show up to drink beer, swim and wield shovels. One (Mike Birbiglia) is the uptight guy. Another (Sam Rockwell) is the party guy, who brings cocaine, unattached women and an even wilder buddy (Mr. Messina).", "paragraph_answer": "To say that their marriage is in trouble would be an exaggeration, but there are tiny cracks in it through which trouble might enter. They spend most of the movie apart. Lee drops Jude off at his grandparents\u2019 house so she can spend a night out with friends. Tim stays behind and involves himself in a bizarre project. He has unearthed a rusty gun and a possibly human bone from a patch of dirt on the far side of the swimming pool, and over the next 24 hours his curiosity blossoms into obsession. He becomes an amateur detective and forensic archaeologist, and also, without quite realizing it, a man digging himself ever deeper into an existential hole. But in the meantime, he has some fun. A few pals show up to drink beer, swim and wield shovels. One (Mike Birbiglia) is the uptight guy. Another (Sam Rockwell) is the party guy, who brings cocaine, unattached women and an even wilder buddy (Mr. Messina).", "sentence_answer": "Lee drops Jude off at his grandparents\u2019 house so she can spend a night out with friends."} +{"question": "What does Tim uncover from a patch of dirt on the far side of the swimming pool?", "paragraph": "To say that their marriage is in trouble would be an exaggeration, but there are tiny cracks in it through which trouble might enter. They spend most of the movie apart. Lee drops Jude off at his grandparents\u2019 house so she can spend a night out with friends. Tim stays behind and involves himself in a bizarre project. He has unearthed a rusty gun and a possibly human bone from a patch of dirt on the far side of the swimming pool, and over the next 24 hours his curiosity blossoms into obsession. He becomes an amateur detective and forensic archaeologist, and also, without quite realizing it, a man digging himself ever deeper into an existential hole. But in the meantime, he has some fun. A few pals show up to drink beer, swim and wield shovels. One (Mike Birbiglia) is the uptight guy. Another (Sam Rockwell) is the party guy, who brings cocaine, unattached women and an even wilder buddy (Mr. Messina).", "answer": "a rusty gun and a possibly human bone", "sentence": "He has unearthed a rusty gun and a possibly human bone from a patch of dirt on the far side of the swimming pool, and over the next 24 hours his curiosity blossoms into obsession.", "paragraph_sentence": "To say that their marriage is in trouble would be an exaggeration, but there are tiny cracks in it through which trouble might enter. They spend most of the movie apart. Lee drops Jude off at his grandparents\u2019 house so she can spend a night out with friends. Tim stays behind and involves himself in a bizarre project. He has unearthed a rusty gun and a possibly human bone from a patch of dirt on the far side of the swimming pool, and over the next 24 hours his curiosity blossoms into obsession. He becomes an amateur detective and forensic archaeologist, and also, without quite realizing it, a man digging himself ever deeper into an existential hole. But in the meantime, he has some fun. A few pals show up to drink beer, swim and wield shovels. One (Mike Birbiglia) is the uptight guy. Another (Sam Rockwell) is the party guy, who brings cocaine, unattached women and an even wilder buddy (Mr. Messina).", "paragraph_answer": "To say that their marriage is in trouble would be an exaggeration, but there are tiny cracks in it through which trouble might enter. They spend most of the movie apart. Lee drops Jude off at his grandparents\u2019 house so she can spend a night out with friends. Tim stays behind and involves himself in a bizarre project. He has unearthed a rusty gun and a possibly human bone from a patch of dirt on the far side of the swimming pool, and over the next 24 hours his curiosity blossoms into obsession. He becomes an amateur detective and forensic archaeologist, and also, without quite realizing it, a man digging himself ever deeper into an existential hole. But in the meantime, he has some fun. A few pals show up to drink beer, swim and wield shovels. One (Mike Birbiglia) is the uptight guy. Another (Sam Rockwell) is the party guy, who brings cocaine, unattached women and an even wilder buddy (Mr. Messina).", "sentence_answer": "He has unearthed a rusty gun and a possibly human bone from a patch of dirt on the far side of the swimming pool, and over the next 24 hours his curiosity blossoms into obsession."} +{"question": "Which actor plays the uptight guy in \"Digging for Fire\"?", "paragraph": "To say that their marriage is in trouble would be an exaggeration, but there are tiny cracks in it through which trouble might enter. They spend most of the movie apart. Lee drops Jude off at his grandparents\u2019 house so she can spend a night out with friends. Tim stays behind and involves himself in a bizarre project. He has unearthed a rusty gun and a possibly human bone from a patch of dirt on the far side of the swimming pool, and over the next 24 hours his curiosity blossoms into obsession. He becomes an amateur detective and forensic archaeologist, and also, without quite realizing it, a man digging himself ever deeper into an existential hole. But in the meantime, he has some fun. A few pals show up to drink beer, swim and wield shovels. One (Mike Birbiglia) is the uptight guy. Another (Sam Rockwell) is the party guy, who brings cocaine, unattached women and an even wilder buddy (Mr. Messina).", "answer": "Mike Birbiglia", "sentence": "One ( Mike Birbiglia ) is the uptight guy.", "paragraph_sentence": "To say that their marriage is in trouble would be an exaggeration, but there are tiny cracks in it through which trouble might enter. They spend most of the movie apart. Lee drops Jude off at his grandparents\u2019 house so she can spend a night out with friends. Tim stays behind and involves himself in a bizarre project. He has unearthed a rusty gun and a possibly human bone from a patch of dirt on the far side of the swimming pool, and over the next 24 hours his curiosity blossoms into obsession. He becomes an amateur detective and forensic archaeologist, and also, without quite realizing it, a man digging himself ever deeper into an existential hole. But in the meantime, he has some fun. A few pals show up to drink beer, swim and wield shovels. One ( Mike Birbiglia ) is the uptight guy. Another (Sam Rockwell) is the party guy, who brings cocaine, unattached women and an even wilder buddy (Mr. Messina).", "paragraph_answer": "To say that their marriage is in trouble would be an exaggeration, but there are tiny cracks in it through which trouble might enter. They spend most of the movie apart. Lee drops Jude off at his grandparents\u2019 house so she can spend a night out with friends. Tim stays behind and involves himself in a bizarre project. He has unearthed a rusty gun and a possibly human bone from a patch of dirt on the far side of the swimming pool, and over the next 24 hours his curiosity blossoms into obsession. He becomes an amateur detective and forensic archaeologist, and also, without quite realizing it, a man digging himself ever deeper into an existential hole. But in the meantime, he has some fun. A few pals show up to drink beer, swim and wield shovels. One ( Mike Birbiglia ) is the uptight guy. Another (Sam Rockwell) is the party guy, who brings cocaine, unattached women and an even wilder buddy (Mr. Messina).", "sentence_answer": "One ( Mike Birbiglia ) is the uptight guy."} +{"question": "Which actor plays the party guy who brings cocaine and unattached women in \"Digging for Fire\"?", "paragraph": "To say that their marriage is in trouble would be an exaggeration, but there are tiny cracks in it through which trouble might enter. They spend most of the movie apart. Lee drops Jude off at his grandparents\u2019 house so she can spend a night out with friends. Tim stays behind and involves himself in a bizarre project. He has unearthed a rusty gun and a possibly human bone from a patch of dirt on the far side of the swimming pool, and over the next 24 hours his curiosity blossoms into obsession. He becomes an amateur detective and forensic archaeologist, and also, without quite realizing it, a man digging himself ever deeper into an existential hole. But in the meantime, he has some fun. A few pals show up to drink beer, swim and wield shovels. One (Mike Birbiglia) is the uptight guy. Another (Sam Rockwell) is the party guy, who brings cocaine, unattached women and an even wilder buddy (Mr. Messina).", "answer": "Sam Rockwell", "sentence": "Another ( Sam Rockwell ) is the party guy, who brings cocaine, unattached women and an even wilder buddy (Mr. Messina).", "paragraph_sentence": "To say that their marriage is in trouble would be an exaggeration, but there are tiny cracks in it through which trouble might enter. They spend most of the movie apart. Lee drops Jude off at his grandparents\u2019 house so she can spend a night out with friends. Tim stays behind and involves himself in a bizarre project. He has unearthed a rusty gun and a possibly human bone from a patch of dirt on the far side of the swimming pool, and over the next 24 hours his curiosity blossoms into obsession. He becomes an amateur detective and forensic archaeologist, and also, without quite realizing it, a man digging himself ever deeper into an existential hole. But in the meantime, he has some fun. A few pals show up to drink beer, swim and wield shovels. One (Mike Birbiglia) is the uptight guy. Another ( Sam Rockwell ) is the party guy, who brings cocaine, unattached women and an even wilder buddy (Mr. Messina). ", "paragraph_answer": "To say that their marriage is in trouble would be an exaggeration, but there are tiny cracks in it through which trouble might enter. They spend most of the movie apart. Lee drops Jude off at his grandparents\u2019 house so she can spend a night out with friends. Tim stays behind and involves himself in a bizarre project. He has unearthed a rusty gun and a possibly human bone from a patch of dirt on the far side of the swimming pool, and over the next 24 hours his curiosity blossoms into obsession. He becomes an amateur detective and forensic archaeologist, and also, without quite realizing it, a man digging himself ever deeper into an existential hole. But in the meantime, he has some fun. A few pals show up to drink beer, swim and wield shovels. One (Mike Birbiglia) is the uptight guy. Another ( Sam Rockwell ) is the party guy, who brings cocaine, unattached women and an even wilder buddy (Mr. Messina).", "sentence_answer": "Another ( Sam Rockwell ) is the party guy, who brings cocaine, unattached women and an even wilder buddy (Mr. Messina)."} +{"question": "Where does Tim find the rusty gun and the possibly human bone?", "paragraph": "To say that their marriage is in trouble would be an exaggeration, but there are tiny cracks in it through which trouble might enter. They spend most of the movie apart. Lee drops Jude off at his grandparents\u2019 house so she can spend a night out with friends. Tim stays behind and involves himself in a bizarre project. He has unearthed a rusty gun and a possibly human bone from a patch of dirt on the far side of the swimming pool, and over the next 24 hours his curiosity blossoms into obsession. He becomes an amateur detective and forensic archaeologist, and also, without quite realizing it, a man digging himself ever deeper into an existential hole. But in the meantime, he has some fun. A few pals show up to drink beer, swim and wield shovels. One (Mike Birbiglia) is the uptight guy. Another (Sam Rockwell) is the party guy, who brings cocaine, unattached women and an even wilder buddy (Mr. Messina).", "answer": "on the far side of the swimming pool", "sentence": "He has unearthed a rusty gun and a possibly human bone from a patch of dirt on the far side of the swimming pool , and over the next 24 hours his curiosity blossoms into obsession.", "paragraph_sentence": "To say that their marriage is in trouble would be an exaggeration, but there are tiny cracks in it through which trouble might enter. They spend most of the movie apart. Lee drops Jude off at his grandparents\u2019 house so she can spend a night out with friends. Tim stays behind and involves himself in a bizarre project. He has unearthed a rusty gun and a possibly human bone from a patch of dirt on the far side of the swimming pool , and over the next 24 hours his curiosity blossoms into obsession. He becomes an amateur detective and forensic archaeologist, and also, without quite realizing it, a man digging himself ever deeper into an existential hole. But in the meantime, he has some fun. A few pals show up to drink beer, swim and wield shovels. One (Mike Birbiglia) is the uptight guy. Another (Sam Rockwell) is the party guy, who brings cocaine, unattached women and an even wilder buddy (Mr. Messina).", "paragraph_answer": "To say that their marriage is in trouble would be an exaggeration, but there are tiny cracks in it through which trouble might enter. They spend most of the movie apart. Lee drops Jude off at his grandparents\u2019 house so she can spend a night out with friends. Tim stays behind and involves himself in a bizarre project. He has unearthed a rusty gun and a possibly human bone from a patch of dirt on the far side of the swimming pool , and over the next 24 hours his curiosity blossoms into obsession. He becomes an amateur detective and forensic archaeologist, and also, without quite realizing it, a man digging himself ever deeper into an existential hole. But in the meantime, he has some fun. A few pals show up to drink beer, swim and wield shovels. One (Mike Birbiglia) is the uptight guy. Another (Sam Rockwell) is the party guy, who brings cocaine, unattached women and an even wilder buddy (Mr. Messina).", "sentence_answer": "He has unearthed a rusty gun and a possibly human bone from a patch of dirt on the far side of the swimming pool , and over the next 24 hours his curiosity blossoms into obsession."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What book does Tim's wife find everywhere she goes?", "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": "Passionate Marriage", "sentence": "Everywhere she goes she finds a copy of Dr. David Schnarch\u2019s \u201c Passionate 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 \u201c Passionate 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 \u201c Passionate 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 \u201c Passionate Marriage ,\u201d which feels like both an earnest, obvious metaphor and a sly running joke."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What is one of the virtues of 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": "modesty", "sentence": "The modesty of \u201cDigging for Fire\u201d is among its virtues, and Mr. Swanberg has become an increasingly trustworthy filmmaker.", "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": "The modesty of \u201cDigging for Fire\u201d is among its virtues, and Mr. Swanberg has become an increasingly trustworthy filmmaker."} +{"question": "What mood does Joe Swanberg's narrative almost entirely unfold in?", "paragraph": "As things threaten to get out of hand for Tim, his wife is courting some disruption of her own, visiting some better-off friends whose relationship looks like a bad New Yorker short story from the \u201970s and then setting off alone into the night. Everywhere she goes she finds a copy of Dr. David Schnarch\u2019s \u201cPassionate Marriage,\u201d which feels like both an earnest, obvious metaphor and a sly running joke. Mr. Swanberg has made a tight, satisfying narrative that unfolds almost entirely in the subjunctive mood. This is a story about what almost happens, what might happen and what is happening under the banal surface of things. The modesty of \u201cDigging for Fire\u201d is among its virtues, and Mr. Swanberg has become an increasingly trustworthy filmmaker. He doesn\u2019t necessarily have a lot to say, but he always makes sure that he knows what he\u2019s talking about.", "answer": "subjunctive", "sentence": "Mr. Swanberg has made a tight, satisfying narrative that unfolds almost entirely in the subjunctive mood.", "paragraph_sentence": "As things threaten to get out of hand for Tim, his wife is courting some disruption of her own, visiting some better-off friends whose relationship looks like a bad New Yorker short story from the \u201970s and then setting off alone into the night. Everywhere she goes she finds a copy of Dr. David Schnarch\u2019s \u201cPassionate Marriage,\u201d which feels like both an earnest, obvious metaphor and a sly running joke. Mr. Swanberg has made a tight, satisfying narrative that unfolds almost entirely in the subjunctive mood. This is a story about what almost happens, what might happen and what is happening under the banal surface of things. The modesty of \u201cDigging for Fire\u201d is among its virtues, and Mr. Swanberg has become an increasingly trustworthy filmmaker. He doesn\u2019t necessarily have a lot to say, but he always makes sure that he knows what he\u2019s talking about.", "paragraph_answer": "As things threaten to get out of hand for Tim, his wife is courting some disruption of her own, visiting some better-off friends whose relationship looks like a bad New Yorker short story from the \u201970s and then setting off alone into the night. Everywhere she goes she finds a copy of Dr. David Schnarch\u2019s \u201cPassionate Marriage,\u201d which feels like both an earnest, obvious metaphor and a sly running joke. Mr. Swanberg has made a tight, satisfying narrative that unfolds almost entirely in the subjunctive mood. This is a story about what almost happens, what might happen and what is happening under the banal surface of things. The modesty of \u201cDigging for Fire\u201d is among its virtues, and Mr. Swanberg has become an increasingly trustworthy filmmaker. He doesn\u2019t necessarily have a lot to say, but he always makes sure that he knows what he\u2019s talking about.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Swanberg has made a tight, satisfying narrative that unfolds almost entirely in the subjunctive mood."} +{"question": "What team did Cambur visit?", "paragraph": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN). And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid. That would surely spice up things a bit.", "answer": "Ajax", "sentence": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN).", "paragraph_sentence": " The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN). And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid. That would surely spice up things a bit.", "paragraph_answer": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN). And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid. That would surely spice up things a bit.", "sentence_answer": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN)."} +{"question": "What player has concerns about his health?", "paragraph": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN). And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid. That would surely spice up things a bit.", "answer": "Lionel Messi\u2019s", "sentence": "And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid.", "paragraph_sentence": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN). And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid. That would surely spice up things a bit.", "paragraph_answer": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN). And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid. That would surely spice up things a bit.", "sentence_answer": "And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid."} +{"question": "What team did Lionel Messi practice with while he was injured?", "paragraph": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN). And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid. That would surely spice up things a bit.", "answer": "Barcelona\u2019s B team", "sentence": "And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid.", "paragraph_sentence": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN). And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid. That would surely spice up things a bit.", "paragraph_answer": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN). And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid. That would surely spice up things a bit.", "sentence_answer": "And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid."} +{"question": "In what city is Lionel Messi expected to play once he is no longer injured?", "paragraph": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN). And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid. That would surely spice up things a bit.", "answer": "Madrid", "sentence": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN).", "paragraph_sentence": " The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN). And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid. That would surely spice up things a bit.", "paragraph_answer": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN). And the only story to pay attention to related to that is Lionel Messi\u2019s health; Messi has been out for months with a knee injury, but he trained with Barcelona\u2019s B team over the weekend \u2014 reportedly looking sharp \u2014 and may make his return in Madrid. That would surely spice up things a bit.", "sentence_answer": "The only must-see club match this weekend \u2014 other than Cambuur\u2019s visit to mighty Ajax on Saturday, of course \u2014 is the season\u2019s first Cl\u00e1sico: Barcelona at Real Madrid on Saturday (12:15 p.m., beIN)."} +{"question": "Who was elected as speaker of the New York State Assembly?", "paragraph": "So it was that Mr. Heastie, the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday, gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides. And while donating blood \u2014 like politics itself \u2014 can make some people squeamish or faint, Mr. Heastie managed to give without passing out. \u201cI\u2019d rather by stabbed with a needle,\u201d he said, \u201cthan pricked with a pin.\u201d The stop at the Red Cross blood drive \u2014 held in the two-story lobby of Driver\u2019s Village, a dealership north of Syracuse \u2014 was near the end of nearly a dozen stops that Mr. Heastie made at the start of a three-day visit upstate this week.", "answer": "Mr. Heastie", "sentence": "So it was that Mr. Heastie , the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday, gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides.", "paragraph_sentence": " So it was that Mr. Heastie , the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday, gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides. And while donating blood \u2014 like politics itself \u2014 can make some people squeamish or faint, Mr. Heastie managed to give without passing out. \u201cI\u2019d rather by stabbed with a needle,\u201d he said, \u201cthan pricked with a pin.\u201d The stop at the Red Cross blood drive \u2014 held in the two-story lobby of Driver\u2019s Village, a dealership north of Syracuse \u2014 was near the end of nearly a dozen stops that Mr. Heastie made at the start of a three-day visit upstate this week.", "paragraph_answer": "So it was that Mr. Heastie , the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday, gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides. And while donating blood \u2014 like politics itself \u2014 can make some people squeamish or faint, Mr. Heastie managed to give without passing out. \u201cI\u2019d rather by stabbed with a needle,\u201d he said, \u201cthan pricked with a pin.\u201d The stop at the Red Cross blood drive \u2014 held in the two-story lobby of Driver\u2019s Village, a dealership north of Syracuse \u2014 was near the end of nearly a dozen stops that Mr. Heastie made at the start of a three-day visit upstate this week.", "sentence_answer": "So it was that Mr. Heastie , the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday, gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides."} +{"question": "In what city was the blood drive being held?", "paragraph": "So it was that Mr. Heastie, the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday, gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides. And while donating blood \u2014 like politics itself \u2014 can make some people squeamish or faint, Mr. Heastie managed to give without passing out. \u201cI\u2019d rather by stabbed with a needle,\u201d he said, \u201cthan pricked with a pin.\u201d The stop at the Red Cross blood drive \u2014 held in the two-story lobby of Driver\u2019s Village, a dealership north of Syracuse \u2014 was near the end of nearly a dozen stops that Mr. Heastie made at the start of a three-day visit upstate this week.", "answer": "Syracuse", "sentence": "So it was that Mr. Heastie, the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday, gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides.", "paragraph_sentence": " So it was that Mr. Heastie, the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday, gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides. And while donating blood \u2014 like politics itself \u2014 can make some people squeamish or faint, Mr. Heastie managed to give without passing out. \u201cI\u2019d rather by stabbed with a needle,\u201d he said, \u201cthan pricked with a pin.\u201d The stop at the Red Cross blood drive \u2014 held in the two-story lobby of Driver\u2019s Village, a dealership north of Syracuse \u2014 was near the end of nearly a dozen stops that Mr. Heastie made at the start of a three-day visit upstate this week.", "paragraph_answer": "So it was that Mr. Heastie, the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday, gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides. And while donating blood \u2014 like politics itself \u2014 can make some people squeamish or faint, Mr. Heastie managed to give without passing out. \u201cI\u2019d rather by stabbed with a needle,\u201d he said, \u201cthan pricked with a pin.\u201d The stop at the Red Cross blood drive \u2014 held in the two-story lobby of Driver\u2019s Village, a dealership north of Syracuse \u2014 was near the end of nearly a dozen stops that Mr. Heastie made at the start of a three-day visit upstate this week.", "sentence_answer": "So it was that Mr. Heastie, the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday, gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides."} +{"question": "In what building did the blood drive take place?", "paragraph": "So it was that Mr. Heastie, the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday, gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides. And while donating blood \u2014 like politics itself \u2014 can make some people squeamish or faint, Mr. Heastie managed to give without passing out. \u201cI\u2019d rather by stabbed with a needle,\u201d he said, \u201cthan pricked with a pin.\u201d The stop at the Red Cross blood drive \u2014 held in the two-story lobby of Driver\u2019s Village, a dealership north of Syracuse \u2014 was near the end of nearly a dozen stops that Mr. Heastie made at the start of a three-day visit upstate this week.", "answer": "the two-story lobby of Driver\u2019s Village", "sentence": "The stop at the Red Cross blood drive \u2014 held in the two-story lobby of Driver\u2019s Village , a dealership north of Syracuse \u2014 was near the end of nearly a dozen stops that Mr. Heastie made at the start of a three-day visit upstate this week.", "paragraph_sentence": "So it was that Mr. Heastie, the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday, gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides. And while donating blood \u2014 like politics itself \u2014 can make some people squeamish or faint, Mr. Heastie managed to give without passing out. \u201cI\u2019d rather by stabbed with a needle,\u201d he said, \u201cthan pricked with a pin.\u201d The stop at the Red Cross blood drive \u2014 held in the two-story lobby of Driver\u2019s Village , a dealership north of Syracuse \u2014 was near the end of nearly a dozen stops that Mr. Heastie made at the start of a three-day visit upstate this week. ", "paragraph_answer": "So it was that Mr. Heastie, the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday, gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides. And while donating blood \u2014 like politics itself \u2014 can make some people squeamish or faint, Mr. Heastie managed to give without passing out. \u201cI\u2019d rather by stabbed with a needle,\u201d he said, \u201cthan pricked with a pin.\u201d The stop at the Red Cross blood drive \u2014 held in the two-story lobby of Driver\u2019s Village , a dealership north of Syracuse \u2014 was near the end of nearly a dozen stops that Mr. Heastie made at the start of a three-day visit upstate this week.", "sentence_answer": "The stop at the Red Cross blood drive \u2014 held in the two-story lobby of Driver\u2019s Village , a dealership north of Syracuse \u2014 was near the end of nearly a dozen stops that Mr. Heastie made at the start of a three-day visit upstate this week."} +{"question": "How many places did Mr. Heastie stop at during his travels?", "paragraph": "So it was that Mr. Heastie, the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday, gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides. And while donating blood \u2014 like politics itself \u2014 can make some people squeamish or faint, Mr. Heastie managed to give without passing out. \u201cI\u2019d rather by stabbed with a needle,\u201d he said, \u201cthan pricked with a pin.\u201d The stop at the Red Cross blood drive \u2014 held in the two-story lobby of Driver\u2019s Village, a dealership north of Syracuse \u2014 was near the end of nearly a dozen stops that Mr. Heastie made at the start of a three-day visit upstate this week.", "answer": "nearly a dozen", "sentence": "The stop at the Red Cross blood drive \u2014 held in the two-story lobby of Driver\u2019s Village, a dealership north of Syracuse \u2014 was near the end of nearly a dozen stops that Mr. Heastie made at the start of a three-day visit upstate this week.", "paragraph_sentence": "So it was that Mr. Heastie, the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday, gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides. And while donating blood \u2014 like politics itself \u2014 can make some people squeamish or faint, Mr. Heastie managed to give without passing out. \u201cI\u2019d rather by stabbed with a needle,\u201d he said, \u201cthan pricked with a pin.\u201d The stop at the Red Cross blood drive \u2014 held in the two-story lobby of Driver\u2019s Village, a dealership north of Syracuse \u2014 was near the end of nearly a dozen stops that Mr. Heastie made at the start of a three-day visit upstate this week. ", "paragraph_answer": "So it was that Mr. Heastie, the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday, gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides. And while donating blood \u2014 like politics itself \u2014 can make some people squeamish or faint, Mr. Heastie managed to give without passing out. \u201cI\u2019d rather by stabbed with a needle,\u201d he said, \u201cthan pricked with a pin.\u201d The stop at the Red Cross blood drive \u2014 held in the two-story lobby of Driver\u2019s Village, a dealership north of Syracuse \u2014 was near the end of nearly a dozen stops that Mr. Heastie made at the start of a three-day visit upstate this week.", "sentence_answer": "The stop at the Red Cross blood drive \u2014 held in the two-story lobby of Driver\u2019s Village, a dealership north of Syracuse \u2014 was near the end of nearly a dozen stops that Mr. Heastie made at the start of a three-day visit upstate this week."} +{"question": "On what day of the week was the blood drive taking place?", "paragraph": "So it was that Mr. Heastie, the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday, gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides. And while donating blood \u2014 like politics itself \u2014 can make some people squeamish or faint, Mr. Heastie managed to give without passing out. \u201cI\u2019d rather by stabbed with a needle,\u201d he said, \u201cthan pricked with a pin.\u201d The stop at the Red Cross blood drive \u2014 held in the two-story lobby of Driver\u2019s Village, a dealership north of Syracuse \u2014 was near the end of nearly a dozen stops that Mr. Heastie made at the start of a three-day visit upstate this week.", "answer": "Tuesday", "sentence": "So it was that Mr. Heastie, the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday , gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides.", "paragraph_sentence": " So it was that Mr. Heastie, the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday , gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides. And while donating blood \u2014 like politics itself \u2014 can make some people squeamish or faint, Mr. Heastie managed to give without passing out. \u201cI\u2019d rather by stabbed with a needle,\u201d he said, \u201cthan pricked with a pin.\u201d The stop at the Red Cross blood drive \u2014 held in the two-story lobby of Driver\u2019s Village, a dealership north of Syracuse \u2014 was near the end of nearly a dozen stops that Mr. Heastie made at the start of a three-day visit upstate this week.", "paragraph_answer": "So it was that Mr. Heastie, the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday , gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides. And while donating blood \u2014 like politics itself \u2014 can make some people squeamish or faint, Mr. Heastie managed to give without passing out. \u201cI\u2019d rather by stabbed with a needle,\u201d he said, \u201cthan pricked with a pin.\u201d The stop at the Red Cross blood drive \u2014 held in the two-story lobby of Driver\u2019s Village, a dealership north of Syracuse \u2014 was near the end of nearly a dozen stops that Mr. Heastie made at the start of a three-day visit upstate this week.", "sentence_answer": "So it was that Mr. Heastie, the recently elected speaker of the New York State Assembly, was at a blood drive here in suburban Syracuse on Tuesday , gamely donating a pint in front of a group of somewhat perplexed phlebotomists and schedule-obsessed aides."} +{"question": "What part of New York is Mr. Heastie from?", "paragraph": "Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission.", "answer": "the Bronx", "sentence": "Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx , described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx , described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx , described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx , described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission."} +{"question": "What is the second motivation for Mr. Heastie to visit central New York?", "paragraph": "Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission.", "answer": "a kind of personal fact-finding mission", "sentence": "Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission .", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission . ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission .", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission ."} +{"question": "What was the first reason Mr. Heastie gave for traveling to central New York?", "paragraph": "Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission.", "answer": "to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d", "sentence": "Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission."} +{"question": "To what part of New York state was Mr. Heastie traveling?", "paragraph": "Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission.", "answer": "central New York", "sentence": "Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission."} +{"question": "Which elected official is originally from the Bronx?", "paragraph": "Mr. Heastie, who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission.", "answer": "Mr. Heastie", "sentence": "Mr. Heastie , who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Heastie , who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission. ", "paragraph_answer": " Mr. Heastie , who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission.", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Heastie , who hails from the Bronx, described the trip to central New York as part of an effort to humanize \u201cwhat we do in Albany,\u201d as well as a kind of personal fact-finding mission."} +{"question": "For how long did Mr. Heastie serve in the Assembly prior his his speakership?", "paragraph": "Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker. But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany, seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public. In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters\u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches.", "answer": "14 years", "sentence": "Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker. But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany, seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public. In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters\u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker. But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany, seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public. In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters\u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker."} +{"question": "Mr. Heastie was considered one of the most influential people in what city?", "paragraph": "Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker. But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany, seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public. In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters\u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches.", "answer": "Albany", "sentence": "But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany , seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker. But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany , seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public. In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters\u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker. But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany , seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public. In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters\u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches.", "sentence_answer": "But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany , seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public."} +{"question": "Over what period of time was Mr. Heastie able to establish himself as a presence?", "paragraph": "Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker. But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany, seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public. In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters\u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches.", "answer": "five months", "sentence": "In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters\u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker. But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany, seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public. In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters\u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches. ", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker. But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany, seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public. In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters\u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches.", "sentence_answer": "In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters\u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches."} +{"question": "To whom did Mr. Heastie often provide curt answers?", "paragraph": "Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker. But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany, seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public. In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters\u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches.", "answer": "reporters", "sentence": "In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters \u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker. But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany, seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public. In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters \u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches. ", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker. But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany, seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public. In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters \u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches.", "sentence_answer": "In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters \u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches."} +{"question": "What figure had previously conversed multiple times with Mr. Heastie?", "paragraph": "Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker. But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany, seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public. In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters\u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches.", "answer": "Ms. Miner", "sentence": "Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker. But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany, seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public. In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters\u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches.", "paragraph_answer": " Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker. But in many cases Tuesday, Mr. Heastie, now one of the most powerful men in Albany, seemed to be introducing himself to members of the public. In his first five months on the job, Mr. Heastie has established himself as a quiet presence in the Capitol, with terse answers to reporters\u2019 questions and a sedate, often dispassionate way of delivering speeches.", "sentence_answer": " Ms. Miner noted that she had spoken to Mr. Heastie many times in the past; Mr. Heastie served for 14 years in the Assembly before becoming speaker."} +{"question": "From what office is the statement?", "paragraph": "A statement from the federal prosecutor\u2019s office said the man, identified as Ayub B., 26, was suspected of having received military training and of recruiting fighters.", "answer": "federal prosecutor", "sentence": "A statement from the federal prosecutor \u2019s office said the man, identified as Ayub B., 26, was suspected of having received military training and of recruiting fighters.", "paragraph_sentence": " A statement from the federal prosecutor \u2019s office said the man, identified as Ayub B., 26, was suspected of having received military training and of recruiting fighters. ", "paragraph_answer": "A statement from the federal prosecutor \u2019s office said the man, identified as Ayub B., 26, was suspected of having received military training and of recruiting fighters.", "sentence_answer": "A statement from the federal prosecutor \u2019s office said the man, identified as Ayub B., 26, was suspected of having received military training and of recruiting fighters."} +{"question": "Wha was the name of the man?", "paragraph": "A statement from the federal prosecutor\u2019s office said the man, identified as Ayub B., 26, was suspected of having received military training and of recruiting fighters.", "answer": "Ayub B., 26", "sentence": "A statement from the federal prosecutor\u2019s office said the man, identified as Ayub B., 26 , was suspected of having received military training and of recruiting fighters.", "paragraph_sentence": " A statement from the federal prosecutor\u2019s office said the man, identified as Ayub B., 26 , was suspected of having received military training and of recruiting fighters. ", "paragraph_answer": "A statement from the federal prosecutor\u2019s office said the man, identified as Ayub B., 26 , was suspected of having received military training and of recruiting fighters.", "sentence_answer": "A statement from the federal prosecutor\u2019s office said the man, identified as Ayub B., 26 , was suspected of having received military training and of recruiting fighters."} +{"question": "What type of training did Ayub received?", "paragraph": "A statement from the federal prosecutor\u2019s office said the man, identified as Ayub B., 26, was suspected of having received military training and of recruiting fighters.", "answer": "military", "sentence": "A statement from the federal prosecutor\u2019s office said the man, identified as Ayub B., 26, was suspected of having received military training and of recruiting fighters.", "paragraph_sentence": " A statement from the federal prosecutor\u2019s office said the man, identified as Ayub B., 26, was suspected of having received military training and of recruiting fighters. ", "paragraph_answer": "A statement from the federal prosecutor\u2019s office said the man, identified as Ayub B., 26, was suspected of having received military training and of recruiting fighters.", "sentence_answer": "A statement from the federal prosecutor\u2019s office said the man, identified as Ayub B., 26, was suspected of having received military training and of recruiting fighters."} +{"question": "What type of people were recruited by Ayub?", "paragraph": "A statement from the federal prosecutor\u2019s office said the man, identified as Ayub B., 26, was suspected of having received military training and of recruiting fighters.", "answer": "fighters", "sentence": "A statement from the federal prosecutor\u2019s office said the man, identified as Ayub B., 26, was suspected of having received military training and of recruiting fighters .", "paragraph_sentence": " A statement from the federal prosecutor\u2019s office said the man, identified as Ayub B., 26, was suspected of having received military training and of recruiting fighters . ", "paragraph_answer": "A statement from the federal prosecutor\u2019s office said the man, identified as Ayub B., 26, was suspected of having received military training and of recruiting fighters .", "sentence_answer": "A statement from the federal prosecutor\u2019s office said the man, identified as Ayub B., 26, was suspected of having received military training and of recruiting fighters ."} +{"question": "What are the most searched inquiries on travel?", "paragraph": "I asked trends researchers at Google to divulge the top travel queries that Internet users have been Googling since the New Year. Many of the most-searched questions were about what to do on vacation in cities including San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Orlando, Dallas, Nashville and Phoenix. Below, however, are the top 10 general travel questions. To help you kick off another year of adventures, I\u2019ve answered them all \u2014 from how to pack a suitcase to what you\u2019re allowed to toss in your carry-on.", "answer": "what to do on vacation in cities", "sentence": "Many of the most-searched questions were about what to do on vacation in cities including San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Orlando, Dallas, Nashville and Phoenix.", "paragraph_sentence": "I asked trends researchers at Google to divulge the top travel queries that Internet users have been Googling since the New Year. Many of the most-searched questions were about what to do on vacation in cities including San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Orlando, Dallas, Nashville and Phoenix. Below, however, are the top 10 general travel questions. To help you kick off another year of adventures, I\u2019ve answered them all \u2014 from how to pack a suitcase to what you\u2019re allowed to toss in your carry-on.", "paragraph_answer": "I asked trends researchers at Google to divulge the top travel queries that Internet users have been Googling since the New Year. Many of the most-searched questions were about what to do on vacation in cities including San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Orlando, Dallas, Nashville and Phoenix. Below, however, are the top 10 general travel questions. To help you kick off another year of adventures, I\u2019ve answered them all \u2014 from how to pack a suitcase to what you\u2019re allowed to toss in your carry-on.", "sentence_answer": "Many of the most-searched questions were about what to do on vacation in cities including San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Orlando, Dallas, Nashville and Phoenix."} +{"question": "What do people want in their lives?", "paragraph": "I asked trends researchers at Google to divulge the top travel queries that Internet users have been Googling since the New Year. Many of the most-searched questions were about what to do on vacation in cities including San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Orlando, Dallas, Nashville and Phoenix. Below, however, are the top 10 general travel questions. To help you kick off another year of adventures, I\u2019ve answered them all \u2014 from how to pack a suitcase to what you\u2019re allowed to toss in your carry-on.", "answer": "year of adventures", "sentence": "To help you kick off another year of adventures , I\u2019ve answered them all \u2014 from how to pack a suitcase to what you\u2019re allowed to toss in your carry-on.", "paragraph_sentence": "I asked trends researchers at Google to divulge the top travel queries that Internet users have been Googling since the New Year. Many of the most-searched questions were about what to do on vacation in cities including San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Orlando, Dallas, Nashville and Phoenix. Below, however, are the top 10 general travel questions. To help you kick off another year of adventures , I\u2019ve answered them all \u2014 from how to pack a suitcase to what you\u2019re allowed to toss in your carry-on. ", "paragraph_answer": "I asked trends researchers at Google to divulge the top travel queries that Internet users have been Googling since the New Year. Many of the most-searched questions were about what to do on vacation in cities including San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Orlando, Dallas, Nashville and Phoenix. Below, however, are the top 10 general travel questions. To help you kick off another year of adventures , I\u2019ve answered them all \u2014 from how to pack a suitcase to what you\u2019re allowed to toss in your carry-on.", "sentence_answer": "To help you kick off another year of adventures , I\u2019ve answered them all \u2014 from how to pack a suitcase to what you\u2019re allowed to toss in your carry-on."} +{"question": "What general questions did the author answer?", "paragraph": "I asked trends researchers at Google to divulge the top travel queries that Internet users have been Googling since the New Year. Many of the most-searched questions were about what to do on vacation in cities including San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Orlando, Dallas, Nashville and Phoenix. Below, however, are the top 10 general travel questions. To help you kick off another year of adventures, I\u2019ve answered them all \u2014 from how to pack a suitcase to what you\u2019re allowed to toss in your carry-on.", "answer": "how to pack a suitcase to what you\u2019re allowed to toss in your carry-on", "sentence": "To help you kick off another year of adventures, I\u2019ve answered them all \u2014 from how to pack a suitcase to what you\u2019re allowed to toss in your carry-on .", "paragraph_sentence": "I asked trends researchers at Google to divulge the top travel queries that Internet users have been Googling since the New Year. Many of the most-searched questions were about what to do on vacation in cities including San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Orlando, Dallas, Nashville and Phoenix. Below, however, are the top 10 general travel questions. To help you kick off another year of adventures, I\u2019ve answered them all \u2014 from how to pack a suitcase to what you\u2019re allowed to toss in your carry-on . ", "paragraph_answer": "I asked trends researchers at Google to divulge the top travel queries that Internet users have been Googling since the New Year. Many of the most-searched questions were about what to do on vacation in cities including San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Orlando, Dallas, Nashville and Phoenix. Below, however, are the top 10 general travel questions. To help you kick off another year of adventures, I\u2019ve answered them all \u2014 from how to pack a suitcase to what you\u2019re allowed to toss in your carry-on .", "sentence_answer": "To help you kick off another year of adventures, I\u2019ve answered them all \u2014 from how to pack a suitcase to what you\u2019re allowed to toss in your carry-on ."} +{"question": "What kind of questions were after the most-searched?", "paragraph": "I asked trends researchers at Google to divulge the top travel queries that Internet users have been Googling since the New Year. Many of the most-searched questions were about what to do on vacation in cities including San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Orlando, Dallas, Nashville and Phoenix. Below, however, are the top 10 general travel questions. To help you kick off another year of adventures, I\u2019ve answered them all \u2014 from how to pack a suitcase to what you\u2019re allowed to toss in your carry-on.", "answer": "top 10 general travel questions", "sentence": "Below, however, are the top 10 general travel questions .", "paragraph_sentence": "I asked trends researchers at Google to divulge the top travel queries that Internet users have been Googling since the New Year. Many of the most-searched questions were about what to do on vacation in cities including San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Orlando, Dallas, Nashville and Phoenix. Below, however, are the top 10 general travel questions . To help you kick off another year of adventures, I\u2019ve answered them all \u2014 from how to pack a suitcase to what you\u2019re allowed to toss in your carry-on.", "paragraph_answer": "I asked trends researchers at Google to divulge the top travel queries that Internet users have been Googling since the New Year. Many of the most-searched questions were about what to do on vacation in cities including San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Orlando, Dallas, Nashville and Phoenix. Below, however, are the top 10 general travel questions . To help you kick off another year of adventures, I\u2019ve answered them all \u2014 from how to pack a suitcase to what you\u2019re allowed to toss in your carry-on.", "sentence_answer": "Below, however, are the top 10 general travel questions ."} +{"question": "What cities are referenced in this piece?", "paragraph": "I asked trends researchers at Google to divulge the top travel queries that Internet users have been Googling since the New Year. Many of the most-searched questions were about what to do on vacation in cities including San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Orlando, Dallas, Nashville and Phoenix. Below, however, are the top 10 general travel questions. To help you kick off another year of adventures, I\u2019ve answered them all \u2014 from how to pack a suitcase to what you\u2019re allowed to toss in your carry-on.", "answer": "San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Orlando, Dallas, Nashville and Phoenix.", "sentence": "Many of the most-searched questions were about what to do on vacation in cities including San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Orlando, Dallas, Nashville and Phoenix. Below, however, are the top 10 general travel questions.", "paragraph_sentence": "I asked trends researchers at Google to divulge the top travel queries that Internet users have been Googling since the New Year. Many of the most-searched questions were about what to do on vacation in cities including San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Orlando, Dallas, Nashville and Phoenix. Below, however, are the top 10 general travel questions. To help you kick off another year of adventures, I\u2019ve answered them all \u2014 from how to pack a suitcase to what you\u2019re allowed to toss in your carry-on.", "paragraph_answer": "I asked trends researchers at Google to divulge the top travel queries that Internet users have been Googling since the New Year. Many of the most-searched questions were about what to do on vacation in cities including San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Orlando, Dallas, Nashville and Phoenix. Below, however, are the top 10 general travel questions. To help you kick off another year of adventures, I\u2019ve answered them all \u2014 from how to pack a suitcase to what you\u2019re allowed to toss in your carry-on.", "sentence_answer": "Many of the most-searched questions were about what to do on vacation in cities including San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Orlando, Dallas, Nashville and Phoenix. Below, however, are the top 10 general travel questions."} +{"question": "What kind of arrangement can cut expenses?", "paragraph": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction. But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank. \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust,\u201d he said.", "answer": "mortgage", "sentence": "a mortgage interest tax deduction.", "paragraph_sentence": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction. But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank. \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction. But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank. \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "a mortgage interest tax deduction."} +{"question": "What are some upsides of a mortgage?", "paragraph": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction. But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank. \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust,\u201d he said.", "answer": "potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction", "sentence": "a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction .", "paragraph_sentence": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction . But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank. \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction . But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank. \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction ."} +{"question": "What should co-borrowers reveal before getting a mortgage?", "paragraph": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction. But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank. \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust,\u201d he said.", "answer": "income, debt and credit status to each other,", "sentence": "Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank.", "paragraph_sentence": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction. But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank. \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction. But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank. \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank."} +{"question": "What is the most important part of co-borrowing?", "paragraph": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction. But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank. \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust,\u201d he said.", "answer": "to be someone you really trust,", "sentence": "\u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust, \u201d he said.", "paragraph_sentence": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction. But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank. \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust, \u201d he said. ", "paragraph_answer": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction. But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank. \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust, \u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust, \u201d he said."} +{"question": "Who is Mike Venable?", "paragraph": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction. But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank. \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust,\u201d he said.", "answer": "a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank", "sentence": "Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank .", "paragraph_sentence": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction. But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank . \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "This type of arrangement can potentially cut buyers\u2019 individual expenses, while providing them with a potential equity gain and a mortgage interest tax deduction. But these ventures can also end badly if buyers assume that friendship alone will see them through any future difficulty. Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank . \u201cIt definitely needs to be someone you really trust,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "Before applying for a mortgage, the co-borrowers should fully reveal their income, debt and credit status to each other, said Mike Venable, a senior vice president and head of underwriting for retail bank operations at TD Bank ."} +{"question": "What do underwriters base elgibility on?", "paragraph": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores, just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan. They should carefully consider the stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short. Mr. Venable noted that if one buyer loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer. (The same principles apply if more than two friends are buying together.) Mr. Venable also recommends planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement.", "answer": "lower of their credit scores", "sentence": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores , just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan.", "paragraph_sentence": " Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores , just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan. They should carefully consider the stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short. Mr. Venable noted that if one buyer loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer. (The same principles apply if more than two friends are buying together.) Mr. Venable also recommends planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement.", "paragraph_answer": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores , just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan. They should carefully consider the stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short. Mr. Venable noted that if one buyer loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer. (The same principles apply if more than two friends are buying together.) Mr. Venable also recommends planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement.", "sentence_answer": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores , just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan."} +{"question": "How are co-borrowers treated?", "paragraph": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores, just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan. They should carefully consider the stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short. Mr. Venable noted that if one buyer loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer. (The same principles apply if more than two friends are buying together.) Mr. Venable also recommends planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement.", "answer": "as with married couples jointly applying for a loan", "sentence": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores, just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan .", "paragraph_sentence": " Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores, just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan . They should carefully consider the stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short. Mr. Venable noted that if one buyer loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer. (The same principles apply if more than two friends are buying together.) Mr. Venable also recommends planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement.", "paragraph_answer": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores, just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan . They should carefully consider the stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short. Mr. Venable noted that if one buyer loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer. (The same principles apply if more than two friends are buying together.) Mr. Venable also recommends planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement.", "sentence_answer": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores, just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan ."} +{"question": "What other considerations are there?", "paragraph": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores, just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan. They should carefully consider the stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short. Mr. Venable noted that if one buyer loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer. (The same principles apply if more than two friends are buying together.) Mr. Venable also recommends planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement.", "answer": "stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short", "sentence": "They should carefully consider the stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short .", "paragraph_sentence": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores, just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan. They should carefully consider the stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short . Mr. Venable noted that if one buyer loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer. (The same principles apply if more than two friends are buying together.) Mr. Venable also recommends planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement.", "paragraph_answer": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores, just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan. They should carefully consider the stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short . Mr. Venable noted that if one buyer loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer. (The same principles apply if more than two friends are buying together.) Mr. Venable also recommends planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement.", "sentence_answer": "They should carefully consider the stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short ."} +{"question": "What happens if one borrower cannot pay?", "paragraph": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores, just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan. They should carefully consider the stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short. Mr. Venable noted that if one buyer loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer. (The same principles apply if more than two friends are buying together.) Mr. Venable also recommends planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement.", "answer": "loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer", "sentence": "Mr. Venable noted that if one buyer loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer .", "paragraph_sentence": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores, just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan. They should carefully consider the stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short. Mr. Venable noted that if one buyer loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer . (The same principles apply if more than two friends are buying together.) Mr. Venable also recommends planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement.", "paragraph_answer": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores, just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan. They should carefully consider the stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short. Mr. Venable noted that if one buyer loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer . (The same principles apply if more than two friends are buying together.) Mr. Venable also recommends planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Venable noted that if one buyer loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer ."} +{"question": "What does Mr. Venable recommend to prevent this?", "paragraph": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores, just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan. They should carefully consider the stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short. Mr. Venable noted that if one buyer loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer. (The same principles apply if more than two friends are buying together.) Mr. Venable also recommends planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement.", "answer": "planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement", "sentence": "Mr. Venable also recommends planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement .", "paragraph_sentence": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores, just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan. They should carefully consider the stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short. Mr. Venable noted that if one buyer loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer. (The same principles apply if more than two friends are buying together.) Mr. Venable also recommends planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement . ", "paragraph_answer": "Co-buyers should be aware that the mortgage underwriter will base their eligibility on the lower of their credit scores, just as with married couples jointly applying for a loan. They should carefully consider the stability of each other\u2019s income, and how long one buyer could cover the mortgage if the other fell short. Mr. Venable noted that if one buyer loses a job and cannot pay, resulting in a delinquency or default, both buyers\u2019 credit would suffer. (The same principles apply if more than two friends are buying together.) Mr. Venable also recommends planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement .", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Venable also recommends planning upfront for how home repairs, insurance and other expenses would be managed in a detailed co-ownership agreement ."} +{"question": "What equipment was working at the time of the crash?", "paragraph": "At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash. In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street. The engineer\u2019s account of the car\u2019s moving into the path of the train was consistent with the account of a man who said he was in the car behind Ms. Brody\u2019s, and who was interviewed by reporters after the crash and by investigators for the federal safety board on Thursday.", "answer": "the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning", "sentence": "At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash.", "paragraph_sentence": " At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash. In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street. The engineer\u2019s account of the car\u2019s moving into the path of the train was consistent with the account of a man who said he was in the car behind Ms. Brody\u2019s, and who was interviewed by reporters after the crash and by investigators for the federal safety board on Thursday.", "paragraph_answer": "At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash. In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street. The engineer\u2019s account of the car\u2019s moving into the path of the train was consistent with the account of a man who said he was in the car behind Ms. Brody\u2019s, and who was interviewed by reporters after the crash and by investigators for the federal safety board on Thursday.", "sentence_answer": "At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash."} +{"question": "Who saw the SUV move onto the tracks?", "paragraph": "At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash. In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street. The engineer\u2019s account of the car\u2019s moving into the path of the train was consistent with the account of a man who said he was in the car behind Ms. Brody\u2019s, and who was interviewed by reporters after the crash and by investigators for the federal safety board on Thursday.", "answer": "engineer operating the train", "sentence": "In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street.", "paragraph_sentence": "At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash. In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street. The engineer\u2019s account of the car\u2019s moving into the path of the train was consistent with the account of a man who said he was in the car behind Ms. Brody\u2019s, and who was interviewed by reporters after the crash and by investigators for the federal safety board on Thursday.", "paragraph_answer": "At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash. In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street. The engineer\u2019s account of the car\u2019s moving into the path of the train was consistent with the account of a man who said he was in the car behind Ms. Brody\u2019s, and who was interviewed by reporters after the crash and by investigators for the federal safety board on Thursday.", "sentence_answer": "In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street."} +{"question": "What street did the railroad tracks cross?", "paragraph": "At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash. In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street. The engineer\u2019s account of the car\u2019s moving into the path of the train was consistent with the account of a man who said he was in the car behind Ms. Brody\u2019s, and who was interviewed by reporters after the crash and by investigators for the federal safety board on Thursday.", "answer": "Commerce Street", "sentence": "In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street .", "paragraph_sentence": "At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash. In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street . The engineer\u2019s account of the car\u2019s moving into the path of the train was consistent with the account of a man who said he was in the car behind Ms. Brody\u2019s, and who was interviewed by reporters after the crash and by investigators for the federal safety board on Thursday.", "paragraph_answer": "At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash. In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street . The engineer\u2019s account of the car\u2019s moving into the path of the train was consistent with the account of a man who said he was in the car behind Ms. Brody\u2019s, and who was interviewed by reporters after the crash and by investigators for the federal safety board on Thursday.", "sentence_answer": "In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street ."} +{"question": "Who briefed the reporters?", "paragraph": "At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash. In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street. The engineer\u2019s account of the car\u2019s moving into the path of the train was consistent with the account of a man who said he was in the car behind Ms. Brody\u2019s, and who was interviewed by reporters after the crash and by investigators for the federal safety board on Thursday.", "answer": "Mr. Sumwalt", "sentence": "At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash.", "paragraph_sentence": " At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash. In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street. The engineer\u2019s account of the car\u2019s moving into the path of the train was consistent with the account of a man who said he was in the car behind Ms. Brody\u2019s, and who was interviewed by reporters after the crash and by investigators for the federal safety board on Thursday.", "paragraph_answer": "At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash. In an interview with investigators on Thursday, the engineer operating the train said he saw the S.U.V. moving onto the tracks as the northbound train approached the crossing at Commerce Street. The engineer\u2019s account of the car\u2019s moving into the path of the train was consistent with the account of a man who said he was in the car behind Ms. Brody\u2019s, and who was interviewed by reporters after the crash and by investigators for the federal safety board on Thursday.", "sentence_answer": "At the briefing, Mr. Sumwalt said that investigators reviewing the workings of the rail crossing found that the warning lights, the alarm and the gate arms were all functioning at the time of the crash."} +{"question": "What appropriate warning did the approaching train give?", "paragraph": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path. Thirty-nine seconds before the crash, Mr. Sumwalt said, warning lights at the crossing had illuminated \u2014 brightly enough to have been seen by drivers. Then the arms closed. Meanwhile, the approaching train sounded the proper warning cadence \u2014 two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast. It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h., Mr. Sumwalt said.", "answer": "two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast", "sentence": "Meanwhile, the approaching train sounded the proper warning cadence \u2014 two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast .", "paragraph_sentence": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path. Thirty-nine seconds before the crash, Mr. Sumwalt said, warning lights at the crossing had illuminated \u2014 brightly enough to have been seen by drivers. Then the arms closed. Meanwhile, the approaching train sounded the proper warning cadence \u2014 two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast . It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h. , Mr. Sumwalt said.", "paragraph_answer": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path. Thirty-nine seconds before the crash, Mr. Sumwalt said, warning lights at the crossing had illuminated \u2014 brightly enough to have been seen by drivers. Then the arms closed. Meanwhile, the approaching train sounded the proper warning cadence \u2014 two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast . It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h., Mr. Sumwalt said.", "sentence_answer": "Meanwhile, the approaching train sounded the proper warning cadence \u2014 two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast ."} +{"question": "How fast was the train going?", "paragraph": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path. Thirty-nine seconds before the crash, Mr. Sumwalt said, warning lights at the crossing had illuminated \u2014 brightly enough to have been seen by drivers. Then the arms closed. Meanwhile, the approaching train sounded the proper warning cadence \u2014 two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast. It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h., Mr. Sumwalt said.", "answer": "2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h.", "sentence": "It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h. , Mr. Sumwalt said.", "paragraph_sentence": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path. Thirty-nine seconds before the crash, Mr. Sumwalt said, warning lights at the crossing had illuminated \u2014 brightly enough to have been seen by drivers. Then the arms closed. Meanwhile, the approaching train sounded the proper warning cadence \u2014 two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast. It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h. , Mr. Sumwalt said. ", "paragraph_answer": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path. Thirty-nine seconds before the crash, Mr. Sumwalt said, warning lights at the crossing had illuminated \u2014 brightly enough to have been seen by drivers. Then the arms closed. Meanwhile, the approaching train sounded the proper warning cadence \u2014 two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast. It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h. , Mr. Sumwalt said.", "sentence_answer": "It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h. , Mr. Sumwalt said."} +{"question": "What closed onto Ms. Brody's car?", "paragraph": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path. Thirty-nine seconds before the crash, Mr. Sumwalt said, warning lights at the crossing had illuminated \u2014 brightly enough to have been seen by drivers. Then the arms closed. Meanwhile, the approaching train sounded the proper warning cadence \u2014 two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast. It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h., Mr. Sumwalt said.", "answer": "a crossing arm", "sentence": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path.", "paragraph_sentence": " The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path. Thirty-nine seconds before the crash, Mr. Sumwalt said, warning lights at the crossing had illuminated \u2014 brightly enough to have been seen by drivers. Then the arms closed. Meanwhile, the approaching train sounded the proper warning cadence \u2014 two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast. It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h. , Mr. Sumwalt said.", "paragraph_answer": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path. Thirty-nine seconds before the crash, Mr. Sumwalt said, warning lights at the crossing had illuminated \u2014 brightly enough to have been seen by drivers. Then the arms closed. Meanwhile, the approaching train sounded the proper warning cadence \u2014 two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast. It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h., Mr. Sumwalt said.", "sentence_answer": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path."} +{"question": "What did Ms. Brody do after the crossing arm closed onto her car?", "paragraph": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path. Thirty-nine seconds before the crash, Mr. Sumwalt said, warning lights at the crossing had illuminated \u2014 brightly enough to have been seen by drivers. Then the arms closed. Meanwhile, the approaching train sounded the proper warning cadence \u2014 two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast. It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h., Mr. Sumwalt said.", "answer": "walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path", "sentence": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path .", "paragraph_sentence": " The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path . Thirty-nine seconds before the crash, Mr. Sumwalt said, warning lights at the crossing had illuminated \u2014 brightly enough to have been seen by drivers. Then the arms closed. Meanwhile, the approaching train sounded the proper warning cadence \u2014 two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast. It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h. , Mr. Sumwalt said.", "paragraph_answer": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path . Thirty-nine seconds before the crash, Mr. Sumwalt said, warning lights at the crossing had illuminated \u2014 brightly enough to have been seen by drivers. Then the arms closed. Meanwhile, the approaching train sounded the proper warning cadence \u2014 two long blasts, followed by a short blast and a long blast. It was going 2 miles per hour under the speed limit, at 58 m.p.h., Mr. Sumwalt said.", "sentence_answer": "The witness told investigators that a crossing arm closed onto Ms. Brody\u2019s car, prompting her to walk outside and touch the gate shortly before getting back into the car and moving the vehicle forward, into the train\u2019s path ."} +{"question": "How long did it take for the train to come to a complete stop?", "paragraph": "The train engineer applied the emergency brake, but the train did not come to a stop until almost 1,000 feet down the track, the car still pinned to its nose. Investigators\u2019 findings on Thursday about track safety did little to illuminate the question of why a train-on-car collision put train passengers into such peril. Cars are struck by trains regularly across the country, according to Federal Railroad Administration records. Since 2006, there has been an average of 2,261 rail crossing accidents a year and an average of 273 deaths a year.", "answer": "almost 1,000 feet down the track", "sentence": "The train engineer applied the emergency brake, but the train did not come to a stop until almost 1,000 feet down the track , the car still pinned to its nose.", "paragraph_sentence": " The train engineer applied the emergency brake, but the train did not come to a stop until almost 1,000 feet down the track , the car still pinned to its nose. Investigators\u2019 findings on Thursday about track safety did little to illuminate the question of why a train-on-car collision put train passengers into such peril. Cars are struck by trains regularly across the country, according to Federal Railroad Administration records. Since 2006, there has been an average of 2,261 rail crossing accidents a year and an average of 273 deaths a year.", "paragraph_answer": "The train engineer applied the emergency brake, but the train did not come to a stop until almost 1,000 feet down the track , the car still pinned to its nose. Investigators\u2019 findings on Thursday about track safety did little to illuminate the question of why a train-on-car collision put train passengers into such peril. Cars are struck by trains regularly across the country, according to Federal Railroad Administration records. Since 2006, there has been an average of 2,261 rail crossing accidents a year and an average of 273 deaths a year.", "sentence_answer": "The train engineer applied the emergency brake, but the train did not come to a stop until almost 1,000 feet down the track , the car still pinned to its nose."} +{"question": "Since 2006, on average, how many rail crossing accidents per year?", "paragraph": "The train engineer applied the emergency brake, but the train did not come to a stop until almost 1,000 feet down the track, the car still pinned to its nose. Investigators\u2019 findings on Thursday about track safety did little to illuminate the question of why a train-on-car collision put train passengers into such peril. Cars are struck by trains regularly across the country, according to Federal Railroad Administration records. Since 2006, there has been an average of 2,261 rail crossing accidents a year and an average of 273 deaths a year.", "answer": "2,261", "sentence": "Since 2006, there has been an average of 2,261 rail crossing accidents a year and an average of 273 deaths a year.", "paragraph_sentence": "The train engineer applied the emergency brake, but the train did not come to a stop until almost 1,000 feet down the track, the car still pinned to its nose. Investigators\u2019 findings on Thursday about track safety did little to illuminate the question of why a train-on-car collision put train passengers into such peril. Cars are struck by trains regularly across the country, according to Federal Railroad Administration records. Since 2006, there has been an average of 2,261 rail crossing accidents a year and an average of 273 deaths a year. ", "paragraph_answer": "The train engineer applied the emergency brake, but the train did not come to a stop until almost 1,000 feet down the track, the car still pinned to its nose. Investigators\u2019 findings on Thursday about track safety did little to illuminate the question of why a train-on-car collision put train passengers into such peril. Cars are struck by trains regularly across the country, according to Federal Railroad Administration records. Since 2006, there has been an average of 2,261 rail crossing accidents a year and an average of 273 deaths a year.", "sentence_answer": "Since 2006, there has been an average of 2,261 rail crossing accidents a year and an average of 273 deaths a year."} +{"question": "How many deaths a year are caused by rail crossing accidents?", "paragraph": "The train engineer applied the emergency brake, but the train did not come to a stop until almost 1,000 feet down the track, the car still pinned to its nose. Investigators\u2019 findings on Thursday about track safety did little to illuminate the question of why a train-on-car collision put train passengers into such peril. Cars are struck by trains regularly across the country, according to Federal Railroad Administration records. Since 2006, there has been an average of 2,261 rail crossing accidents a year and an average of 273 deaths a year.", "answer": "273", "sentence": "Since 2006, there has been an average of 2,261 rail crossing accidents a year and an average of 273 deaths a year.", "paragraph_sentence": "The train engineer applied the emergency brake, but the train did not come to a stop until almost 1,000 feet down the track, the car still pinned to its nose. Investigators\u2019 findings on Thursday about track safety did little to illuminate the question of why a train-on-car collision put train passengers into such peril. Cars are struck by trains regularly across the country, according to Federal Railroad Administration records. Since 2006, there has been an average of 2,261 rail crossing accidents a year and an average of 273 deaths a year. ", "paragraph_answer": "The train engineer applied the emergency brake, but the train did not come to a stop until almost 1,000 feet down the track, the car still pinned to its nose. Investigators\u2019 findings on Thursday about track safety did little to illuminate the question of why a train-on-car collision put train passengers into such peril. Cars are struck by trains regularly across the country, according to Federal Railroad Administration records. Since 2006, there has been an average of 2,261 rail crossing accidents a year and an average of 273 deaths a year.", "sentence_answer": "Since 2006, there has been an average of 2,261 rail crossing accidents a year and an average of 273 deaths a year."} +{"question": "What agency keeps records of railroad accidents?", "paragraph": "The train engineer applied the emergency brake, but the train did not come to a stop until almost 1,000 feet down the track, the car still pinned to its nose. Investigators\u2019 findings on Thursday about track safety did little to illuminate the question of why a train-on-car collision put train passengers into such peril. Cars are struck by trains regularly across the country, according to Federal Railroad Administration records. Since 2006, there has been an average of 2,261 rail crossing accidents a year and an average of 273 deaths a year.", "answer": "Federal Railroad Administration", "sentence": "Cars are struck by trains regularly across the country, according to Federal Railroad Administration records.", "paragraph_sentence": "The train engineer applied the emergency brake, but the train did not come to a stop until almost 1,000 feet down the track, the car still pinned to its nose. Investigators\u2019 findings on Thursday about track safety did little to illuminate the question of why a train-on-car collision put train passengers into such peril. Cars are struck by trains regularly across the country, according to Federal Railroad Administration records. Since 2006, there has been an average of 2,261 rail crossing accidents a year and an average of 273 deaths a year.", "paragraph_answer": "The train engineer applied the emergency brake, but the train did not come to a stop until almost 1,000 feet down the track, the car still pinned to its nose. Investigators\u2019 findings on Thursday about track safety did little to illuminate the question of why a train-on-car collision put train passengers into such peril. Cars are struck by trains regularly across the country, according to Federal Railroad Administration records. Since 2006, there has been an average of 2,261 rail crossing accidents a year and an average of 273 deaths a year.", "sentence_answer": "Cars are struck by trains regularly across the country, according to Federal Railroad Administration records."} +{"question": "When did the crossing reopen?", "paragraph": "Instead, investigators, commuters and even people close to her were left to try to make sense of her puzzling actions. Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car. The crossing was reopened to cars and trains on Thursday, but people remained wary. Drivers paused after they ascended the slight hill toward the crossing, taking a second look down the tracks before they passed.", "answer": "on Thursday", "sentence": "Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car.", "paragraph_sentence": "Instead, investigators, commuters and even people close to her were left to try to make sense of her puzzling actions. Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car. The crossing was reopened to cars and trains on Thursday, but people remained wary. Drivers paused after they ascended the slight hill toward the crossing, taking a second look down the tracks before they passed.", "paragraph_answer": "Instead, investigators, commuters and even people close to her were left to try to make sense of her puzzling actions. Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car. The crossing was reopened to cars and trains on Thursday, but people remained wary. Drivers paused after they ascended the slight hill toward the crossing, taking a second look down the tracks before they passed.", "sentence_answer": "Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car."} +{"question": "Who were left by her puzzling action?", "paragraph": "Instead, investigators, commuters and even people close to her were left to try to make sense of her puzzling actions. Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car. The crossing was reopened to cars and trains on Thursday, but people remained wary. Drivers paused after they ascended the slight hill toward the crossing, taking a second look down the tracks before they passed.", "answer": "investigators, commuters and even people close to her", "sentence": "Instead, investigators, commuters and even people close to her were left to try to make sense of her puzzling actions.", "paragraph_sentence": " Instead, investigators, commuters and even people close to her were left to try to make sense of her puzzling actions. Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car. The crossing was reopened to cars and trains on Thursday, but people remained wary. Drivers paused after they ascended the slight hill toward the crossing, taking a second look down the tracks before they passed.", "paragraph_answer": "Instead, investigators, commuters and even people close to her were left to try to make sense of her puzzling actions. Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car. The crossing was reopened to cars and trains on Thursday, but people remained wary. Drivers paused after they ascended the slight hill toward the crossing, taking a second look down the tracks before they passed.", "sentence_answer": "Instead, investigators, commuters and even people close to her were left to try to make sense of her puzzling actions."} +{"question": "What did drivers do because they were weary of the accident?", "paragraph": "Instead, investigators, commuters and even people close to her were left to try to make sense of her puzzling actions. Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car. The crossing was reopened to cars and trains on Thursday, but people remained wary. Drivers paused after they ascended the slight hill toward the crossing, taking a second look down the tracks before they passed.", "answer": "Drivers paused after they ascended the slight hill toward the crossing, taking a second look down the tracks before they passed.", "sentence": "Drivers paused after they ascended the slight hill toward the crossing, taking a second look down the tracks before they passed.", "paragraph_sentence": "Instead, investigators, commuters and even people close to her were left to try to make sense of her puzzling actions. Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car. The crossing was reopened to cars and trains on Thursday, but people remained wary. Drivers paused after they ascended the slight hill toward the crossing, taking a second look down the tracks before they passed. ", "paragraph_answer": "Instead, investigators, commuters and even people close to her were left to try to make sense of her puzzling actions. Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car. The crossing was reopened to cars and trains on Thursday, but people remained wary. Drivers paused after they ascended the slight hill toward the crossing, taking a second look down the tracks before they passed. ", "sentence_answer": " Drivers paused after they ascended the slight hill toward the crossing, taking a second look down the tracks before they passed. "} +{"question": "Which rail tore through the first passenger car?", "paragraph": "Instead, investigators, commuters and even people close to her were left to try to make sense of her puzzling actions. Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car. The crossing was reopened to cars and trains on Thursday, but people remained wary. Drivers paused after they ascended the slight hill toward the crossing, taking a second look down the tracks before they passed.", "answer": "the third rail", "sentence": "Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car.", "paragraph_sentence": "Instead, investigators, commuters and even people close to her were left to try to make sense of her puzzling actions. Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car. The crossing was reopened to cars and trains on Thursday, but people remained wary. Drivers paused after they ascended the slight hill toward the crossing, taking a second look down the tracks before they passed.", "paragraph_answer": "Instead, investigators, commuters and even people close to her were left to try to make sense of her puzzling actions. Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car. The crossing was reopened to cars and trains on Thursday, but people remained wary. Drivers paused after they ascended the slight hill toward the crossing, taking a second look down the tracks before they passed.", "sentence_answer": "Friends and family members of the passengers who died grappled on Thursday with the question of why her car never moved off the tracks, and why the third rail tore through the first passenger car."} +{"question": "What hangs ov er the staircase?", "paragraph": "The restaurant is just as dramatic on the inside. A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows. The dining experience, however, wasn\u2019t quite as grandiose. The service was pleasant but sloppy, and the pricey menu, while dotted with winners, also had a fair share of disappointments. This could be because Orama lost its original executive chef, John Piliouras, in September. Two chefs, Dongmin Lyu and Nazario Anselmo, both of whom had been working in the kitchen, took over for him. Orama, which opened last New Year\u2019s Eve, is owned by Simeon Maximiadis, a former emergency room psychologist who went into managing steakhouses, and Stacey Christakos, his partner in both business and life. They spent millions renovating what had been a Japanese restaurant.", "answer": "A Swarovski crystal chandelier", "sentence": "A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows.", "paragraph_sentence": "The restaurant is just as dramatic on the inside. A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows. The dining experience, however, wasn\u2019t quite as grandiose. The service was pleasant but sloppy, and the pricey menu, while dotted with winners, also had a fair share of disappointments. This could be because Orama lost its original executive chef, John Piliouras, in September. Two chefs, Dongmin Lyu and Nazario Anselmo, both of whom had been working in the kitchen, took over for him. Orama, which opened last New Year\u2019s Eve, is owned by Simeon Maximiadis, a former emergency room psychologist who went into managing steakhouses, and Stacey Christakos, his partner in both business and life. They spent millions renovating what had been a Japanese restaurant.", "paragraph_answer": "The restaurant is just as dramatic on the inside. A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows. The dining experience, however, wasn\u2019t quite as grandiose. The service was pleasant but sloppy, and the pricey menu, while dotted with winners, also had a fair share of disappointments. This could be because Orama lost its original executive chef, John Piliouras, in September. Two chefs, Dongmin Lyu and Nazario Anselmo, both of whom had been working in the kitchen, took over for him. Orama, which opened last New Year\u2019s Eve, is owned by Simeon Maximiadis, a former emergency room psychologist who went into managing steakhouses, and Stacey Christakos, his partner in both business and life. They spent millions renovating what had been a Japanese restaurant.", "sentence_answer": " A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows."} +{"question": "What shape is the staircase?", "paragraph": "The restaurant is just as dramatic on the inside. A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows. The dining experience, however, wasn\u2019t quite as grandiose. The service was pleasant but sloppy, and the pricey menu, while dotted with winners, also had a fair share of disappointments. This could be because Orama lost its original executive chef, John Piliouras, in September. Two chefs, Dongmin Lyu and Nazario Anselmo, both of whom had been working in the kitchen, took over for him. Orama, which opened last New Year\u2019s Eve, is owned by Simeon Maximiadis, a former emergency room psychologist who went into managing steakhouses, and Stacey Christakos, his partner in both business and life. They spent millions renovating what had been a Japanese restaurant.", "answer": "circular", "sentence": "A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows.", "paragraph_sentence": "The restaurant is just as dramatic on the inside. A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows. The dining experience, however, wasn\u2019t quite as grandiose. The service was pleasant but sloppy, and the pricey menu, while dotted with winners, also had a fair share of disappointments. This could be because Orama lost its original executive chef, John Piliouras, in September. Two chefs, Dongmin Lyu and Nazario Anselmo, both of whom had been working in the kitchen, took over for him. Orama, which opened last New Year\u2019s Eve, is owned by Simeon Maximiadis, a former emergency room psychologist who went into managing steakhouses, and Stacey Christakos, his partner in both business and life. They spent millions renovating what had been a Japanese restaurant.", "paragraph_answer": "The restaurant is just as dramatic on the inside. A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows. The dining experience, however, wasn\u2019t quite as grandiose. The service was pleasant but sloppy, and the pricey menu, while dotted with winners, also had a fair share of disappointments. This could be because Orama lost its original executive chef, John Piliouras, in September. Two chefs, Dongmin Lyu and Nazario Anselmo, both of whom had been working in the kitchen, took over for him. Orama, which opened last New Year\u2019s Eve, is owned by Simeon Maximiadis, a former emergency room psychologist who went into managing steakhouses, and Stacey Christakos, his partner in both business and life. They spent millions renovating what had been a Japanese restaurant.", "sentence_answer": "A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows."} +{"question": "How many bulbs does the chandelier have?", "paragraph": "The restaurant is just as dramatic on the inside. A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows. The dining experience, however, wasn\u2019t quite as grandiose. The service was pleasant but sloppy, and the pricey menu, while dotted with winners, also had a fair share of disappointments. This could be because Orama lost its original executive chef, John Piliouras, in September. Two chefs, Dongmin Lyu and Nazario Anselmo, both of whom had been working in the kitchen, took over for him. Orama, which opened last New Year\u2019s Eve, is owned by Simeon Maximiadis, a former emergency room psychologist who went into managing steakhouses, and Stacey Christakos, his partner in both business and life. They spent millions renovating what had been a Japanese restaurant.", "answer": "96", "sentence": "A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows.", "paragraph_sentence": "The restaurant is just as dramatic on the inside. A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows. The dining experience, however, wasn\u2019t quite as grandiose. The service was pleasant but sloppy, and the pricey menu, while dotted with winners, also had a fair share of disappointments. This could be because Orama lost its original executive chef, John Piliouras, in September. Two chefs, Dongmin Lyu and Nazario Anselmo, both of whom had been working in the kitchen, took over for him. Orama, which opened last New Year\u2019s Eve, is owned by Simeon Maximiadis, a former emergency room psychologist who went into managing steakhouses, and Stacey Christakos, his partner in both business and life. They spent millions renovating what had been a Japanese restaurant.", "paragraph_answer": "The restaurant is just as dramatic on the inside. A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows. The dining experience, however, wasn\u2019t quite as grandiose. The service was pleasant but sloppy, and the pricey menu, while dotted with winners, also had a fair share of disappointments. This could be because Orama lost its original executive chef, John Piliouras, in September. Two chefs, Dongmin Lyu and Nazario Anselmo, both of whom had been working in the kitchen, took over for him. Orama, which opened last New Year\u2019s Eve, is owned by Simeon Maximiadis, a former emergency room psychologist who went into managing steakhouses, and Stacey Christakos, his partner in both business and life. They spent millions renovating what had been a Japanese restaurant.", "sentence_answer": "A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows."} +{"question": "How was the service at the restaurant?", "paragraph": "The restaurant is just as dramatic on the inside. A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows. The dining experience, however, wasn\u2019t quite as grandiose. The service was pleasant but sloppy, and the pricey menu, while dotted with winners, also had a fair share of disappointments. This could be because Orama lost its original executive chef, John Piliouras, in September. Two chefs, Dongmin Lyu and Nazario Anselmo, both of whom had been working in the kitchen, took over for him. Orama, which opened last New Year\u2019s Eve, is owned by Simeon Maximiadis, a former emergency room psychologist who went into managing steakhouses, and Stacey Christakos, his partner in both business and life. They spent millions renovating what had been a Japanese restaurant.", "answer": "pleasant but sloppy", "sentence": "The service was pleasant but sloppy , and the pricey menu, while dotted with winners, also had a fair share of disappointments.", "paragraph_sentence": "The restaurant is just as dramatic on the inside. A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows. The dining experience, however, wasn\u2019t quite as grandiose. The service was pleasant but sloppy , and the pricey menu, while dotted with winners, also had a fair share of disappointments. This could be because Orama lost its original executive chef, John Piliouras, in September. Two chefs, Dongmin Lyu and Nazario Anselmo, both of whom had been working in the kitchen, took over for him. Orama, which opened last New Year\u2019s Eve, is owned by Simeon Maximiadis, a former emergency room psychologist who went into managing steakhouses, and Stacey Christakos, his partner in both business and life. They spent millions renovating what had been a Japanese restaurant.", "paragraph_answer": "The restaurant is just as dramatic on the inside. A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows. The dining experience, however, wasn\u2019t quite as grandiose. The service was pleasant but sloppy , and the pricey menu, while dotted with winners, also had a fair share of disappointments. This could be because Orama lost its original executive chef, John Piliouras, in September. Two chefs, Dongmin Lyu and Nazario Anselmo, both of whom had been working in the kitchen, took over for him. Orama, which opened last New Year\u2019s Eve, is owned by Simeon Maximiadis, a former emergency room psychologist who went into managing steakhouses, and Stacey Christakos, his partner in both business and life. They spent millions renovating what had been a Japanese restaurant.", "sentence_answer": "The service was pleasant but sloppy , and the pricey menu, while dotted with winners, also had a fair share of disappointments."} +{"question": "Who was the original chef to Orama?", "paragraph": "The restaurant is just as dramatic on the inside. A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows. The dining experience, however, wasn\u2019t quite as grandiose. The service was pleasant but sloppy, and the pricey menu, while dotted with winners, also had a fair share of disappointments. This could be because Orama lost its original executive chef, John Piliouras, in September. Two chefs, Dongmin Lyu and Nazario Anselmo, both of whom had been working in the kitchen, took over for him. Orama, which opened last New Year\u2019s Eve, is owned by Simeon Maximiadis, a former emergency room psychologist who went into managing steakhouses, and Stacey Christakos, his partner in both business and life. They spent millions renovating what had been a Japanese restaurant.", "answer": "John Piliouras", "sentence": "This could be because Orama lost its original executive chef, John Piliouras , in September.", "paragraph_sentence": "The restaurant is just as dramatic on the inside. A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows. The dining experience, however, wasn\u2019t quite as grandiose. The service was pleasant but sloppy, and the pricey menu, while dotted with winners, also had a fair share of disappointments. This could be because Orama lost its original executive chef, John Piliouras , in September. Two chefs, Dongmin Lyu and Nazario Anselmo, both of whom had been working in the kitchen, took over for him. Orama, which opened last New Year\u2019s Eve, is owned by Simeon Maximiadis, a former emergency room psychologist who went into managing steakhouses, and Stacey Christakos, his partner in both business and life. They spent millions renovating what had been a Japanese restaurant.", "paragraph_answer": "The restaurant is just as dramatic on the inside. A Swarovski crystal chandelier with 96 bulbs hangs above the circular staircase, separating the lounge and bar from the white-hued dining room, where there are floor-to-ceiling windows. The dining experience, however, wasn\u2019t quite as grandiose. The service was pleasant but sloppy, and the pricey menu, while dotted with winners, also had a fair share of disappointments. This could be because Orama lost its original executive chef, John Piliouras , in September. Two chefs, Dongmin Lyu and Nazario Anselmo, both of whom had been working in the kitchen, took over for him. Orama, which opened last New Year\u2019s Eve, is owned by Simeon Maximiadis, a former emergency room psychologist who went into managing steakhouses, and Stacey Christakos, his partner in both business and life. They spent millions renovating what had been a Japanese restaurant.", "sentence_answer": "This could be because Orama lost its original executive chef, John Piliouras , in September."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What food was meaty and tender?", "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": "grilled octopus", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "What kind of shrimp is served?", "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": "Santorini", "sentence": "The shrimp Santorini \u2014 jumbo shrimp in a smooth and garlicky tomato sauce, with pieces of feta \u2014 was hearty and comforting.", "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": "The shrimp Santorini \u2014 jumbo shrimp in a smooth and garlicky tomato sauce, with pieces of feta \u2014 was hearty and comforting."} +{"question": "In what kind of sauce is the lobster cocktail set in?", "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": "diced tomatoes", "sentence": "The high-quality shrimp and lobster cocktail gained zip with a chunky sauce of diced tomatoes , olive oil and Fresno chiles.", "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": "The high-quality shrimp and lobster cocktail gained zip with a chunky sauce of diced tomatoes , olive oil and Fresno chiles."} +{"question": "How much did the Lobster Maxime cost?", "paragraph": "Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime, calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster. What arrived, however \u2014 four morsels on a mound of saut\u00e9ed spinach \u2014 was minuscule at best. To Orama\u2019s credit, when I inquired about the skimpy portion, the manager offered to send us another dish with her compliments. The sea bass turned out to be the only worthwhile entree that evening. A 16-ounce bone-in filet mignon, one of Orama\u2019s specialties, had too much visible fat to justify the $64 cost, and the rack of lamb special, while tender, lacked flavor.", "answer": "$56", "sentence": "Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime, calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster.", "paragraph_sentence": " Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime, calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster. What arrived, however \u2014 four morsels on a mound of saut\u00e9ed spinach \u2014 was minuscule at best. To Orama\u2019s credit, when I inquired about the skimpy portion, the manager offered to send us another dish with her compliments. The sea bass turned out to be the only worthwhile entree that evening. A 16-ounce bone-in filet mignon, one of Orama\u2019s specialties, had too much visible fat to justify the $64 cost, and the rack of lamb special, while tender, lacked flavor.", "paragraph_answer": "Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime, calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster. What arrived, however \u2014 four morsels on a mound of saut\u00e9ed spinach \u2014 was minuscule at best. To Orama\u2019s credit, when I inquired about the skimpy portion, the manager offered to send us another dish with her compliments. The sea bass turned out to be the only worthwhile entree that evening. A 16-ounce bone-in filet mignon, one of Orama\u2019s specialties, had too much visible fat to justify the $64 cost, and the rack of lamb special, while tender, lacked flavor.", "sentence_answer": "Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime, calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster."} +{"question": "What was the signature entree?", "paragraph": "Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime, calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster. What arrived, however \u2014 four morsels on a mound of saut\u00e9ed spinach \u2014 was minuscule at best. To Orama\u2019s credit, when I inquired about the skimpy portion, the manager offered to send us another dish with her compliments. The sea bass turned out to be the only worthwhile entree that evening. A 16-ounce bone-in filet mignon, one of Orama\u2019s specialties, had too much visible fat to justify the $64 cost, and the rack of lamb special, while tender, lacked flavor.", "answer": "Lobster Maxime", "sentence": "Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime , calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster.", "paragraph_sentence": " Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime , calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster. What arrived, however \u2014 four morsels on a mound of saut\u00e9ed spinach \u2014 was minuscule at best. To Orama\u2019s credit, when I inquired about the skimpy portion, the manager offered to send us another dish with her compliments. The sea bass turned out to be the only worthwhile entree that evening. A 16-ounce bone-in filet mignon, one of Orama\u2019s specialties, had too much visible fat to justify the $64 cost, and the rack of lamb special, while tender, lacked flavor.", "paragraph_answer": "Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime , calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster. What arrived, however \u2014 four morsels on a mound of saut\u00e9ed spinach \u2014 was minuscule at best. To Orama\u2019s credit, when I inquired about the skimpy portion, the manager offered to send us another dish with her compliments. The sea bass turned out to be the only worthwhile entree that evening. A 16-ounce bone-in filet mignon, one of Orama\u2019s specialties, had too much visible fat to justify the $64 cost, and the rack of lamb special, while tender, lacked flavor.", "sentence_answer": "Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime , calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster."} +{"question": "How large was the promised lobster?", "paragraph": "Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime, calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster. What arrived, however \u2014 four morsels on a mound of saut\u00e9ed spinach \u2014 was minuscule at best. To Orama\u2019s credit, when I inquired about the skimpy portion, the manager offered to send us another dish with her compliments. The sea bass turned out to be the only worthwhile entree that evening. A 16-ounce bone-in filet mignon, one of Orama\u2019s specialties, had too much visible fat to justify the $64 cost, and the rack of lamb special, while tender, lacked flavor.", "answer": "one-and-a-half-pound", "sentence": "Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime, calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster.", "paragraph_sentence": " Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime, calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster. What arrived, however \u2014 four morsels on a mound of saut\u00e9ed spinach \u2014 was minuscule at best. To Orama\u2019s credit, when I inquired about the skimpy portion, the manager offered to send us another dish with her compliments. The sea bass turned out to be the only worthwhile entree that evening. A 16-ounce bone-in filet mignon, one of Orama\u2019s specialties, had too much visible fat to justify the $64 cost, and the rack of lamb special, while tender, lacked flavor.", "paragraph_answer": "Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime, calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster. What arrived, however \u2014 four morsels on a mound of saut\u00e9ed spinach \u2014 was minuscule at best. To Orama\u2019s credit, when I inquired about the skimpy portion, the manager offered to send us another dish with her compliments. The sea bass turned out to be the only worthwhile entree that evening. A 16-ounce bone-in filet mignon, one of Orama\u2019s specialties, had too much visible fat to justify the $64 cost, and the rack of lamb special, while tender, lacked flavor.", "sentence_answer": "Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime, calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster."} +{"question": "Which entree was the best that night?", "paragraph": "Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime, calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster. What arrived, however \u2014 four morsels on a mound of saut\u00e9ed spinach \u2014 was minuscule at best. To Orama\u2019s credit, when I inquired about the skimpy portion, the manager offered to send us another dish with her compliments. The sea bass turned out to be the only worthwhile entree that evening. A 16-ounce bone-in filet mignon, one of Orama\u2019s specialties, had too much visible fat to justify the $64 cost, and the rack of lamb special, while tender, lacked flavor.", "answer": "sea bass", "sentence": "The sea bass turned out to be the only worthwhile entree that evening.", "paragraph_sentence": "Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime, calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster. What arrived, however \u2014 four morsels on a mound of saut\u00e9ed spinach \u2014 was minuscule at best. To Orama\u2019s credit, when I inquired about the skimpy portion, the manager offered to send us another dish with her compliments. The sea bass turned out to be the only worthwhile entree that evening. A 16-ounce bone-in filet mignon, one of Orama\u2019s specialties, had too much visible fat to justify the $64 cost, and the rack of lamb special, while tender, lacked flavor.", "paragraph_answer": "Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime, calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster. What arrived, however \u2014 four morsels on a mound of saut\u00e9ed spinach \u2014 was minuscule at best. To Orama\u2019s credit, when I inquired about the skimpy portion, the manager offered to send us another dish with her compliments. The sea bass turned out to be the only worthwhile entree that evening. A 16-ounce bone-in filet mignon, one of Orama\u2019s specialties, had too much visible fat to justify the $64 cost, and the rack of lamb special, while tender, lacked flavor.", "sentence_answer": "The sea bass turned out to be the only worthwhile entree that evening."} +{"question": "What did the manager off to send them?", "paragraph": "Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime, calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster. What arrived, however \u2014 four morsels on a mound of saut\u00e9ed spinach \u2014 was minuscule at best. To Orama\u2019s credit, when I inquired about the skimpy portion, the manager offered to send us another dish with her compliments. The sea bass turned out to be the only worthwhile entree that evening. A 16-ounce bone-in filet mignon, one of Orama\u2019s specialties, had too much visible fat to justify the $64 cost, and the rack of lamb special, while tender, lacked flavor.", "answer": "another dish", "sentence": "To Orama\u2019s credit, when I inquired about the skimpy portion, the manager offered to send us another dish with her compliments.", "paragraph_sentence": "Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime, calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster. What arrived, however \u2014 four morsels on a mound of saut\u00e9ed spinach \u2014 was minuscule at best. To Orama\u2019s credit, when I inquired about the skimpy portion, the manager offered to send us another dish with her compliments. The sea bass turned out to be the only worthwhile entree that evening. A 16-ounce bone-in filet mignon, one of Orama\u2019s specialties, had too much visible fat to justify the $64 cost, and the rack of lamb special, while tender, lacked flavor.", "paragraph_answer": "Our server pushed the $56 Lobster Maxime, calling it a signature entree and promising meat out of the shell from a one-and-a-half-pound lobster. What arrived, however \u2014 four morsels on a mound of saut\u00e9ed spinach \u2014 was minuscule at best. To Orama\u2019s credit, when I inquired about the skimpy portion, the manager offered to send us another dish with her compliments. The sea bass turned out to be the only worthwhile entree that evening. A 16-ounce bone-in filet mignon, one of Orama\u2019s specialties, had too much visible fat to justify the $64 cost, and the rack of lamb special, while tender, lacked flavor.", "sentence_answer": "To Orama\u2019s credit, when I inquired about the skimpy portion, the manager offered to send us another dish with her compliments."} +{"question": "Who was the pastry chef?", "paragraph": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high. Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "answer": "Krista Guiwo", "sentence": "The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo , was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu.", "paragraph_sentence": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo , was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high. Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "paragraph_answer": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo , was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high. Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "sentence_answer": "The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo , was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu."} +{"question": "Where was Krista Guiwo trained?", "paragraph": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high. Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "answer": "New York City", "sentence": "The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu.", "paragraph_sentence": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high. Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "paragraph_answer": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high. Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "sentence_answer": "The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu."} +{"question": "How many choices are usually on the dessert menu?", "paragraph": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high. Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "answer": "eight", "sentence": "The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu.", "paragraph_sentence": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high. Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "paragraph_answer": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high. Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "sentence_answer": "The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu."} +{"question": "How often did the dessert menu change?", "paragraph": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high. Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "answer": "frequently", "sentence": "The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu.", "paragraph_sentence": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high. Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "paragraph_answer": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high. Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "sentence_answer": "The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu."} +{"question": "What were the expectations for the night?", "paragraph": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high. Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "answer": "high", "sentence": "These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high .", "paragraph_sentence": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high . Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "paragraph_answer": "We fared better with desserts. The pastry chef, Krista Guiwo, was trained at the French Culinary Institute in New York City and usually has eight frequently changing choices on her menu. While the frozen lemon mousse had an icy, not-so-lemony taste, the cr\u00e8me br\u00fbl\u00e9e trio in classic, coffee and passion fruit flavors, as well as the triple chocolate mousse cake, were incredibly velvety. Better still was the warm honey pine nut tart, with a filling of caramelized nuts and chestnut honey and a dollop of cr\u00e8me fra\u00eeche. It was a sweet ending, but the nits picked throughout the night went beyond the food: some of our plates were chipped, and the waitstaff didn\u2019t replace a dropped knife or clean up our visibly dirty table before bringing out desserts. These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high . Still, there are those views and that gorgeous villa. Until the kitchen and the service catch up to the visuals, it might be preferable to savor the skyline and d\u00e9cor from the bar.", "sentence_answer": "These faults wouldn\u2019t matter as much if the prices were lower, but Orama is an expensive night out, so our expectations were high ."} +{"question": "How much does it cost to visit the musuem?", "paragraph": "Aficionados of lowbrow aesthetics are also heading to Gl\u00f2ries, thanks to the arresting Encants Barcelona, the new home for the area\u2019s historic flea market \u2014 a ramped space, open on the sides, with slender columns supporting an angular reflective metal canopy. Since the market moved here in 2013, it\u2019s been drawing 120,000 antiques- and junk-seekers a week to early morning auctions and the stalls that open directly after the last lot has sold. Ironically, the building housing the Barcelona Design Museum \u2014 a squat, zinc-clad structure with front and rear cantilevers \u2014 hasn\u2019t exactly been celebrated for its exterior form. Some have taken to calling it \u201cthe Stapler.\u201d The museum, which unites collections of Catalan decorative arts, graphics, ceramics, textiles and fashion that previously had been scattered throughout the city, was originally to be the building\u2019s sole occupant. But in an effort to make use of its vast interior spaces \u2014 and lure people to what is still considered an off-the-beaten-path area \u2014 municipal leaders also moved the city\u2019s major design organizations here and named the whole enterprise Design Hub Barcelona, or DHUB, hoping it truly would become a hotbed of design activity. Today, while design professionals show up for events in the building, museum-goers make their way through exhibits that sprawl on four floors, displaying everything from corsets to cruets. The museum, which charges a 5-euro ($5.35) general admission fee, has already drawn about 204,000 visitors. While its holdings may never achieve the popularity of the offerings at the flea market next door, the institution is already helping attract traffic \u2014 foot traffic \u2014 to the Gl\u00f2ries area. \u201cIn the future Gl\u00f2ries will be a place not for cars, but for people,\u201d said Isabel Roig, executive director of Barcelona Design Center, a trade group and one of DHUB\u2019s new tenants.", "answer": "5-euro ($5.35)", "sentence": "The museum, which charges a 5-euro ($5.35) general admission fee, has already drawn about 204,000 visitors.", "paragraph_sentence": "Aficionados of lowbrow aesthetics are also heading to Gl\u00f2ries, thanks to the arresting Encants Barcelona, the new home for the area\u2019s historic flea market \u2014 a ramped space, open on the sides, with slender columns supporting an angular reflective metal canopy. Since the market moved here in 2013, it\u2019s been drawing 120,000 antiques- and junk-seekers a week to early morning auctions and the stalls that open directly after the last lot has sold. Ironically, the building housing the Barcelona Design Museum \u2014 a squat, zinc-clad structure with front and rear cantilevers \u2014 hasn\u2019t exactly been celebrated for its exterior form. Some have taken to calling it \u201cthe Stapler.\u201d The museum, which unites collections of Catalan decorative arts, graphics, ceramics, textiles and fashion that previously had been scattered throughout the city, was originally to be the building\u2019s sole occupant. But in an effort to make use of its vast interior spaces \u2014 and lure people to what is still considered an off-the-beaten-path area \u2014 municipal leaders also moved the city\u2019s major design organizations here and named the whole enterprise Design Hub Barcelona, or DHUB, hoping it truly would become a hotbed of design activity. Today, while design professionals show up for events in the building, museum-goers make their way through exhibits that sprawl on four floors, displaying everything from corsets to cruets. The museum, which charges a 5-euro ($5.35) general admission fee, has already drawn about 204,000 visitors. While its holdings may never achieve the popularity of the offerings at the flea market next door, the institution is already helping attract traffic \u2014 foot traffic \u2014 to the Gl\u00f2ries area. \u201cIn the future Gl\u00f2ries will be a place not for cars, but for people,\u201d said Isabel Roig, executive director of Barcelona Design Center, a trade group and one of DHUB\u2019s new tenants.", "paragraph_answer": "Aficionados of lowbrow aesthetics are also heading to Gl\u00f2ries, thanks to the arresting Encants Barcelona, the new home for the area\u2019s historic flea market \u2014 a ramped space, open on the sides, with slender columns supporting an angular reflective metal canopy. Since the market moved here in 2013, it\u2019s been drawing 120,000 antiques- and junk-seekers a week to early morning auctions and the stalls that open directly after the last lot has sold. Ironically, the building housing the Barcelona Design Museum \u2014 a squat, zinc-clad structure with front and rear cantilevers \u2014 hasn\u2019t exactly been celebrated for its exterior form. Some have taken to calling it \u201cthe Stapler.\u201d The museum, which unites collections of Catalan decorative arts, graphics, ceramics, textiles and fashion that previously had been scattered throughout the city, was originally to be the building\u2019s sole occupant. But in an effort to make use of its vast interior spaces \u2014 and lure people to what is still considered an off-the-beaten-path area \u2014 municipal leaders also moved the city\u2019s major design organizations here and named the whole enterprise Design Hub Barcelona, or DHUB, hoping it truly would become a hotbed of design activity. Today, while design professionals show up for events in the building, museum-goers make their way through exhibits that sprawl on four floors, displaying everything from corsets to cruets. The museum, which charges a 5-euro ($5.35) general admission fee, has already drawn about 204,000 visitors. While its holdings may never achieve the popularity of the offerings at the flea market next door, the institution is already helping attract traffic \u2014 foot traffic \u2014 to the Gl\u00f2ries area. \u201cIn the future Gl\u00f2ries will be a place not for cars, but for people,\u201d said Isabel Roig, executive director of Barcelona Design Center, a trade group and one of DHUB\u2019s new tenants.", "sentence_answer": "The museum, which charges a 5-euro ($5.35) general admission fee, has already drawn about 204,000 visitors."} +{"question": "What did the municipal leaders name the new city organizations?", "paragraph": "Aficionados of lowbrow aesthetics are also heading to Gl\u00f2ries, thanks to the arresting Encants Barcelona, the new home for the area\u2019s historic flea market \u2014 a ramped space, open on the sides, with slender columns supporting an angular reflective metal canopy. Since the market moved here in 2013, it\u2019s been drawing 120,000 antiques- and junk-seekers a week to early morning auctions and the stalls that open directly after the last lot has sold. Ironically, the building housing the Barcelona Design Museum \u2014 a squat, zinc-clad structure with front and rear cantilevers \u2014 hasn\u2019t exactly been celebrated for its exterior form. Some have taken to calling it \u201cthe Stapler.\u201d The museum, which unites collections of Catalan decorative arts, graphics, ceramics, textiles and fashion that previously had been scattered throughout the city, was originally to be the building\u2019s sole occupant. But in an effort to make use of its vast interior spaces \u2014 and lure people to what is still considered an off-the-beaten-path area \u2014 municipal leaders also moved the city\u2019s major design organizations here and named the whole enterprise Design Hub Barcelona, or DHUB, hoping it truly would become a hotbed of design activity. Today, while design professionals show up for events in the building, museum-goers make their way through exhibits that sprawl on four floors, displaying everything from corsets to cruets. The museum, which charges a 5-euro ($5.35) general admission fee, has already drawn about 204,000 visitors. While its holdings may never achieve the popularity of the offerings at the flea market next door, the institution is already helping attract traffic \u2014 foot traffic \u2014 to the Gl\u00f2ries area. \u201cIn the future Gl\u00f2ries will be a place not for cars, but for people,\u201d said Isabel Roig, executive director of Barcelona Design Center, a trade group and one of DHUB\u2019s new tenants.", "answer": "Design Hub Barcelona", "sentence": "But in an effort to make use of its vast interior spaces \u2014 and lure people to what is still considered an off-the-beaten-path area \u2014 municipal leaders also moved the city\u2019s major design organizations here and named the whole enterprise Design Hub Barcelona , or DHUB, hoping it truly would become a hotbed of design activity.", "paragraph_sentence": "Aficionados of lowbrow aesthetics are also heading to Gl\u00f2ries, thanks to the arresting Encants Barcelona, the new home for the area\u2019s historic flea market \u2014 a ramped space, open on the sides, with slender columns supporting an angular reflective metal canopy. Since the market moved here in 2013, it\u2019s been drawing 120,000 antiques- and junk-seekers a week to early morning auctions and the stalls that open directly after the last lot has sold. Ironically, the building housing the Barcelona Design Museum \u2014 a squat, zinc-clad structure with front and rear cantilevers \u2014 hasn\u2019t exactly been celebrated for its exterior form. Some have taken to calling it \u201cthe Stapler.\u201d The museum, which unites collections of Catalan decorative arts, graphics, ceramics, textiles and fashion that previously had been scattered throughout the city, was originally to be the building\u2019s sole occupant. But in an effort to make use of its vast interior spaces \u2014 and lure people to what is still considered an off-the-beaten-path area \u2014 municipal leaders also moved the city\u2019s major design organizations here and named the whole enterprise Design Hub Barcelona , or DHUB, hoping it truly would become a hotbed of design activity. Today, while design professionals show up for events in the building, museum-goers make their way through exhibits that sprawl on four floors, displaying everything from corsets to cruets. The museum, which charges a 5-euro ($5.35) general admission fee, has already drawn about 204,000 visitors. While its holdings may never achieve the popularity of the offerings at the flea market next door, the institution is already helping attract traffic \u2014 foot traffic \u2014 to the Gl\u00f2ries area. \u201cIn the future Gl\u00f2ries will be a place not for cars, but for people,\u201d said Isabel Roig, executive director of Barcelona Design Center, a trade group and one of DHUB\u2019s new tenants.", "paragraph_answer": "Aficionados of lowbrow aesthetics are also heading to Gl\u00f2ries, thanks to the arresting Encants Barcelona, the new home for the area\u2019s historic flea market \u2014 a ramped space, open on the sides, with slender columns supporting an angular reflective metal canopy. Since the market moved here in 2013, it\u2019s been drawing 120,000 antiques- and junk-seekers a week to early morning auctions and the stalls that open directly after the last lot has sold. Ironically, the building housing the Barcelona Design Museum \u2014 a squat, zinc-clad structure with front and rear cantilevers \u2014 hasn\u2019t exactly been celebrated for its exterior form. Some have taken to calling it \u201cthe Stapler.\u201d The museum, which unites collections of Catalan decorative arts, graphics, ceramics, textiles and fashion that previously had been scattered throughout the city, was originally to be the building\u2019s sole occupant. But in an effort to make use of its vast interior spaces \u2014 and lure people to what is still considered an off-the-beaten-path area \u2014 municipal leaders also moved the city\u2019s major design organizations here and named the whole enterprise Design Hub Barcelona , or DHUB, hoping it truly would become a hotbed of design activity. Today, while design professionals show up for events in the building, museum-goers make their way through exhibits that sprawl on four floors, displaying everything from corsets to cruets. The museum, which charges a 5-euro ($5.35) general admission fee, has already drawn about 204,000 visitors. While its holdings may never achieve the popularity of the offerings at the flea market next door, the institution is already helping attract traffic \u2014 foot traffic \u2014 to the Gl\u00f2ries area. \u201cIn the future Gl\u00f2ries will be a place not for cars, but for people,\u201d said Isabel Roig, executive director of Barcelona Design Center, a trade group and one of DHUB\u2019s new tenants.", "sentence_answer": "But in an effort to make use of its vast interior spaces \u2014 and lure people to what is still considered an off-the-beaten-path area \u2014 municipal leaders also moved the city\u2019s major design organizations here and named the whole enterprise Design Hub Barcelona , or DHUB, hoping it truly would become a hotbed of design activity."} +{"question": "About how many visitors has the musuem had already?", "paragraph": "Aficionados of lowbrow aesthetics are also heading to Gl\u00f2ries, thanks to the arresting Encants Barcelona, the new home for the area\u2019s historic flea market \u2014 a ramped space, open on the sides, with slender columns supporting an angular reflective metal canopy. Since the market moved here in 2013, it\u2019s been drawing 120,000 antiques- and junk-seekers a week to early morning auctions and the stalls that open directly after the last lot has sold. Ironically, the building housing the Barcelona Design Museum \u2014 a squat, zinc-clad structure with front and rear cantilevers \u2014 hasn\u2019t exactly been celebrated for its exterior form. Some have taken to calling it \u201cthe Stapler.\u201d The museum, which unites collections of Catalan decorative arts, graphics, ceramics, textiles and fashion that previously had been scattered throughout the city, was originally to be the building\u2019s sole occupant. But in an effort to make use of its vast interior spaces \u2014 and lure people to what is still considered an off-the-beaten-path area \u2014 municipal leaders also moved the city\u2019s major design organizations here and named the whole enterprise Design Hub Barcelona, or DHUB, hoping it truly would become a hotbed of design activity. Today, while design professionals show up for events in the building, museum-goers make their way through exhibits that sprawl on four floors, displaying everything from corsets to cruets. The museum, which charges a 5-euro ($5.35) general admission fee, has already drawn about 204,000 visitors. While its holdings may never achieve the popularity of the offerings at the flea market next door, the institution is already helping attract traffic \u2014 foot traffic \u2014 to the Gl\u00f2ries area. \u201cIn the future Gl\u00f2ries will be a place not for cars, but for people,\u201d said Isabel Roig, executive director of Barcelona Design Center, a trade group and one of DHUB\u2019s new tenants.", "answer": "204,000", "sentence": "The museum, which charges a 5-euro ($5.35) general admission fee, has already drawn about 204,000 visitors.", "paragraph_sentence": "Aficionados of lowbrow aesthetics are also heading to Gl\u00f2ries, thanks to the arresting Encants Barcelona, the new home for the area\u2019s historic flea market \u2014 a ramped space, open on the sides, with slender columns supporting an angular reflective metal canopy. Since the market moved here in 2013, it\u2019s been drawing 120,000 antiques- and junk-seekers a week to early morning auctions and the stalls that open directly after the last lot has sold. Ironically, the building housing the Barcelona Design Museum \u2014 a squat, zinc-clad structure with front and rear cantilevers \u2014 hasn\u2019t exactly been celebrated for its exterior form. Some have taken to calling it \u201cthe Stapler.\u201d The museum, which unites collections of Catalan decorative arts, graphics, ceramics, textiles and fashion that previously had been scattered throughout the city, was originally to be the building\u2019s sole occupant. But in an effort to make use of its vast interior spaces \u2014 and lure people to what is still considered an off-the-beaten-path area \u2014 municipal leaders also moved the city\u2019s major design organizations here and named the whole enterprise Design Hub Barcelona, or DHUB, hoping it truly would become a hotbed of design activity. Today, while design professionals show up for events in the building, museum-goers make their way through exhibits that sprawl on four floors, displaying everything from corsets to cruets. The museum, which charges a 5-euro ($5.35) general admission fee, has already drawn about 204,000 visitors. While its holdings may never achieve the popularity of the offerings at the flea market next door, the institution is already helping attract traffic \u2014 foot traffic \u2014 to the Gl\u00f2ries area. \u201cIn the future Gl\u00f2ries will be a place not for cars, but for people,\u201d said Isabel Roig, executive director of Barcelona Design Center, a trade group and one of DHUB\u2019s new tenants.", "paragraph_answer": "Aficionados of lowbrow aesthetics are also heading to Gl\u00f2ries, thanks to the arresting Encants Barcelona, the new home for the area\u2019s historic flea market \u2014 a ramped space, open on the sides, with slender columns supporting an angular reflective metal canopy. Since the market moved here in 2013, it\u2019s been drawing 120,000 antiques- and junk-seekers a week to early morning auctions and the stalls that open directly after the last lot has sold. Ironically, the building housing the Barcelona Design Museum \u2014 a squat, zinc-clad structure with front and rear cantilevers \u2014 hasn\u2019t exactly been celebrated for its exterior form. Some have taken to calling it \u201cthe Stapler.\u201d The museum, which unites collections of Catalan decorative arts, graphics, ceramics, textiles and fashion that previously had been scattered throughout the city, was originally to be the building\u2019s sole occupant. But in an effort to make use of its vast interior spaces \u2014 and lure people to what is still considered an off-the-beaten-path area \u2014 municipal leaders also moved the city\u2019s major design organizations here and named the whole enterprise Design Hub Barcelona, or DHUB, hoping it truly would become a hotbed of design activity. Today, while design professionals show up for events in the building, museum-goers make their way through exhibits that sprawl on four floors, displaying everything from corsets to cruets. The museum, which charges a 5-euro ($5.35) general admission fee, has already drawn about 204,000 visitors. While its holdings may never achieve the popularity of the offerings at the flea market next door, the institution is already helping attract traffic \u2014 foot traffic \u2014 to the Gl\u00f2ries area. \u201cIn the future Gl\u00f2ries will be a place not for cars, but for people,\u201d said Isabel Roig, executive director of Barcelona Design Center, a trade group and one of DHUB\u2019s new tenants.", "sentence_answer": "The museum, which charges a 5-euro ($5.35) general admission fee, has already drawn about 204,000 visitors."} +{"question": "The Barcelona Design Musuem has what in both the front and back?", "paragraph": "Aficionados of lowbrow aesthetics are also heading to Gl\u00f2ries, thanks to the arresting Encants Barcelona, the new home for the area\u2019s historic flea market \u2014 a ramped space, open on the sides, with slender columns supporting an angular reflective metal canopy. Since the market moved here in 2013, it\u2019s been drawing 120,000 antiques- and junk-seekers a week to early morning auctions and the stalls that open directly after the last lot has sold. Ironically, the building housing the Barcelona Design Museum \u2014 a squat, zinc-clad structure with front and rear cantilevers \u2014 hasn\u2019t exactly been celebrated for its exterior form. Some have taken to calling it \u201cthe Stapler.\u201d The museum, which unites collections of Catalan decorative arts, graphics, ceramics, textiles and fashion that previously had been scattered throughout the city, was originally to be the building\u2019s sole occupant. But in an effort to make use of its vast interior spaces \u2014 and lure people to what is still considered an off-the-beaten-path area \u2014 municipal leaders also moved the city\u2019s major design organizations here and named the whole enterprise Design Hub Barcelona, or DHUB, hoping it truly would become a hotbed of design activity. Today, while design professionals show up for events in the building, museum-goers make their way through exhibits that sprawl on four floors, displaying everything from corsets to cruets. The museum, which charges a 5-euro ($5.35) general admission fee, has already drawn about 204,000 visitors. While its holdings may never achieve the popularity of the offerings at the flea market next door, the institution is already helping attract traffic \u2014 foot traffic \u2014 to the Gl\u00f2ries area. \u201cIn the future Gl\u00f2ries will be a place not for cars, but for people,\u201d said Isabel Roig, executive director of Barcelona Design Center, a trade group and one of DHUB\u2019s new tenants.", "answer": "front and rear cantilevers", "sentence": "Ironically, the building housing the Barcelona Design Museum \u2014 a squat, zinc-clad structure with front and rear cantilevers \u2014 hasn\u2019t exactly been celebrated for its exterior form.", "paragraph_sentence": "Aficionados of lowbrow aesthetics are also heading to Gl\u00f2ries, thanks to the arresting Encants Barcelona, the new home for the area\u2019s historic flea market \u2014 a ramped space, open on the sides, with slender columns supporting an angular reflective metal canopy. Since the market moved here in 2013, it\u2019s been drawing 120,000 antiques- and junk-seekers a week to early morning auctions and the stalls that open directly after the last lot has sold. Ironically, the building housing the Barcelona Design Museum \u2014 a squat, zinc-clad structure with front and rear cantilevers \u2014 hasn\u2019t exactly been celebrated for its exterior form. Some have taken to calling it \u201cthe Stapler.\u201d The museum, which unites collections of Catalan decorative arts, graphics, ceramics, textiles and fashion that previously had been scattered throughout the city, was originally to be the building\u2019s sole occupant. But in an effort to make use of its vast interior spaces \u2014 and lure people to what is still considered an off-the-beaten-path area \u2014 municipal leaders also moved the city\u2019s major design organizations here and named the whole enterprise Design Hub Barcelona, or DHUB, hoping it truly would become a hotbed of design activity. Today, while design professionals show up for events in the building, museum-goers make their way through exhibits that sprawl on four floors, displaying everything from corsets to cruets. The museum, which charges a 5-euro ($5.35) general admission fee, has already drawn about 204,000 visitors. While its holdings may never achieve the popularity of the offerings at the flea market next door, the institution is already helping attract traffic \u2014 foot traffic \u2014 to the Gl\u00f2ries area. \u201cIn the future Gl\u00f2ries will be a place not for cars, but for people,\u201d said Isabel Roig, executive director of Barcelona Design Center, a trade group and one of DHUB\u2019s new tenants.", "paragraph_answer": "Aficionados of lowbrow aesthetics are also heading to Gl\u00f2ries, thanks to the arresting Encants Barcelona, the new home for the area\u2019s historic flea market \u2014 a ramped space, open on the sides, with slender columns supporting an angular reflective metal canopy. Since the market moved here in 2013, it\u2019s been drawing 120,000 antiques- and junk-seekers a week to early morning auctions and the stalls that open directly after the last lot has sold. Ironically, the building housing the Barcelona Design Museum \u2014 a squat, zinc-clad structure with front and rear cantilevers \u2014 hasn\u2019t exactly been celebrated for its exterior form. Some have taken to calling it \u201cthe Stapler.\u201d The museum, which unites collections of Catalan decorative arts, graphics, ceramics, textiles and fashion that previously had been scattered throughout the city, was originally to be the building\u2019s sole occupant. But in an effort to make use of its vast interior spaces \u2014 and lure people to what is still considered an off-the-beaten-path area \u2014 municipal leaders also moved the city\u2019s major design organizations here and named the whole enterprise Design Hub Barcelona, or DHUB, hoping it truly would become a hotbed of design activity. Today, while design professionals show up for events in the building, museum-goers make their way through exhibits that sprawl on four floors, displaying everything from corsets to cruets. The museum, which charges a 5-euro ($5.35) general admission fee, has already drawn about 204,000 visitors. While its holdings may never achieve the popularity of the offerings at the flea market next door, the institution is already helping attract traffic \u2014 foot traffic \u2014 to the Gl\u00f2ries area. \u201cIn the future Gl\u00f2ries will be a place not for cars, but for people,\u201d said Isabel Roig, executive director of Barcelona Design Center, a trade group and one of DHUB\u2019s new tenants.", "sentence_answer": "Ironically, the building housing the Barcelona Design Museum \u2014 a squat, zinc-clad structure with front and rear cantilevers \u2014 hasn\u2019t exactly been celebrated for its exterior form."} +{"question": "How many antiques does the musuem have?", "paragraph": "Aficionados of lowbrow aesthetics are also heading to Gl\u00f2ries, thanks to the arresting Encants Barcelona, the new home for the area\u2019s historic flea market \u2014 a ramped space, open on the sides, with slender columns supporting an angular reflective metal canopy. Since the market moved here in 2013, it\u2019s been drawing 120,000 antiques- and junk-seekers a week to early morning auctions and the stalls that open directly after the last lot has sold. Ironically, the building housing the Barcelona Design Museum \u2014 a squat, zinc-clad structure with front and rear cantilevers \u2014 hasn\u2019t exactly been celebrated for its exterior form. Some have taken to calling it \u201cthe Stapler.\u201d The museum, which unites collections of Catalan decorative arts, graphics, ceramics, textiles and fashion that previously had been scattered throughout the city, was originally to be the building\u2019s sole occupant. But in an effort to make use of its vast interior spaces \u2014 and lure people to what is still considered an off-the-beaten-path area \u2014 municipal leaders also moved the city\u2019s major design organizations here and named the whole enterprise Design Hub Barcelona, or DHUB, hoping it truly would become a hotbed of design activity. Today, while design professionals show up for events in the building, museum-goers make their way through exhibits that sprawl on four floors, displaying everything from corsets to cruets. The museum, which charges a 5-euro ($5.35) general admission fee, has already drawn about 204,000 visitors. While its holdings may never achieve the popularity of the offerings at the flea market next door, the institution is already helping attract traffic \u2014 foot traffic \u2014 to the Gl\u00f2ries area. \u201cIn the future Gl\u00f2ries will be a place not for cars, but for people,\u201d said Isabel Roig, executive director of Barcelona Design Center, a trade group and one of DHUB\u2019s new tenants.", "answer": "120,000", "sentence": "Since the market moved here in 2013, it\u2019s been drawing 120,000 antiques- and junk-seekers a week to early morning auctions and the stalls that open directly after the last lot has sold.", "paragraph_sentence": "Aficionados of lowbrow aesthetics are also heading to Gl\u00f2ries, thanks to the arresting Encants Barcelona, the new home for the area\u2019s historic flea market \u2014 a ramped space, open on the sides, with slender columns supporting an angular reflective metal canopy. Since the market moved here in 2013, it\u2019s been drawing 120,000 antiques- and junk-seekers a week to early morning auctions and the stalls that open directly after the last lot has sold. Ironically, the building housing the Barcelona Design Museum \u2014 a squat, zinc-clad structure with front and rear cantilevers \u2014 hasn\u2019t exactly been celebrated for its exterior form. Some have taken to calling it \u201cthe Stapler.\u201d The museum, which unites collections of Catalan decorative arts, graphics, ceramics, textiles and fashion that previously had been scattered throughout the city, was originally to be the building\u2019s sole occupant. But in an effort to make use of its vast interior spaces \u2014 and lure people to what is still considered an off-the-beaten-path area \u2014 municipal leaders also moved the city\u2019s major design organizations here and named the whole enterprise Design Hub Barcelona, or DHUB, hoping it truly would become a hotbed of design activity. Today, while design professionals show up for events in the building, museum-goers make their way through exhibits that sprawl on four floors, displaying everything from corsets to cruets. The museum, which charges a 5-euro ($5.35) general admission fee, has already drawn about 204,000 visitors. While its holdings may never achieve the popularity of the offerings at the flea market next door, the institution is already helping attract traffic \u2014 foot traffic \u2014 to the Gl\u00f2ries area. \u201cIn the future Gl\u00f2ries will be a place not for cars, but for people,\u201d said Isabel Roig, executive director of Barcelona Design Center, a trade group and one of DHUB\u2019s new tenants.", "paragraph_answer": "Aficionados of lowbrow aesthetics are also heading to Gl\u00f2ries, thanks to the arresting Encants Barcelona, the new home for the area\u2019s historic flea market \u2014 a ramped space, open on the sides, with slender columns supporting an angular reflective metal canopy. Since the market moved here in 2013, it\u2019s been drawing 120,000 antiques- and junk-seekers a week to early morning auctions and the stalls that open directly after the last lot has sold. Ironically, the building housing the Barcelona Design Museum \u2014 a squat, zinc-clad structure with front and rear cantilevers \u2014 hasn\u2019t exactly been celebrated for its exterior form. Some have taken to calling it \u201cthe Stapler.\u201d The museum, which unites collections of Catalan decorative arts, graphics, ceramics, textiles and fashion that previously had been scattered throughout the city, was originally to be the building\u2019s sole occupant. But in an effort to make use of its vast interior spaces \u2014 and lure people to what is still considered an off-the-beaten-path area \u2014 municipal leaders also moved the city\u2019s major design organizations here and named the whole enterprise Design Hub Barcelona, or DHUB, hoping it truly would become a hotbed of design activity. Today, while design professionals show up for events in the building, museum-goers make their way through exhibits that sprawl on four floors, displaying everything from corsets to cruets. The museum, which charges a 5-euro ($5.35) general admission fee, has already drawn about 204,000 visitors. While its holdings may never achieve the popularity of the offerings at the flea market next door, the institution is already helping attract traffic \u2014 foot traffic \u2014 to the Gl\u00f2ries area. \u201cIn the future Gl\u00f2ries will be a place not for cars, but for people,\u201d said Isabel Roig, executive director of Barcelona Design Center, a trade group and one of DHUB\u2019s new tenants.", "sentence_answer": "Since the market moved here in 2013, it\u2019s been drawing 120,000 antiques- and junk-seekers a week to early morning auctions and the stalls that open directly after the last lot has sold."} +{"question": "The roundabout in the Glories area of Barcelona has been torn down as part of what program?", "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": "roadway reconfiguration", "sentence": "The roundabout has been torn down as part of a roadway reconfiguration , making the area more walkable.", "paragraph_sentence": "Not so long ago, travelers might have stopped in the Gl\u00f2ries area of Barcelona only if they were stuck in traffic. Three major roads leading in and out of this Spanish city \u2014 Avenida Diagonal, Avenida Meridiana and the Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes \u2014 converged here at an elevated roundabout, where cars often came to a standstill. But lately this northeastern axis of the Catalan capital \u2014 situated in the Sant Mart\u00ed district, bordering Eixample \u2014 is becoming a place to go to, not just through, especially for those interested in design. The roundabout has been torn down as part of a roadway reconfiguration , making the area more walkable. And some of the city\u2019s most exciting public spaces have sprung up nearby, including a popular flea market under a modernist metal roof and, opening last December, the Barcelona Design Museum. \u201cThe area is definitely up-and-coming,\u201d said the tour guide Jordan Susselman, whose company, Hi. This Is Barcelona \u2026 , increasingly makes stops in Gl\u00f2ries and adjacent Poblenou. In fact, the city has been trying to invigorate this part of town for some time. Ildefons Cerd\u00e0, the engineer who drew up the 1859 plan for the expansion of Barcelona, envisioned his Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes as a new town center. Instead, Gl\u00f2ries (pronounced GLO-rias), as it\u2019s commonly called, became the aforementioned traffic snarl, a no man\u2019s land at the top point of a triangular swath stretching down to the Mediterranean, encompassing Poblenou, or \u201cnew city,\u201d a longtime manufacturing zone that declined in the 20th century.", "paragraph_answer": "Not so long ago, travelers might have stopped in the Gl\u00f2ries area of Barcelona only if they were stuck in traffic. Three major roads leading in and out of this Spanish city \u2014 Avenida Diagonal, Avenida Meridiana and the Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes \u2014 converged here at an elevated roundabout, where cars often came to a standstill. But lately this northeastern axis of the Catalan capital \u2014 situated in the Sant Mart\u00ed district, bordering Eixample \u2014 is becoming a place to go to, not just through, especially for those interested in design. The roundabout has been torn down as part of a roadway reconfiguration , making the area more walkable. And some of the city\u2019s most exciting public spaces have sprung up nearby, including a popular flea market under a modernist metal roof and, opening last December, the Barcelona Design Museum. \u201cThe area is definitely up-and-coming,\u201d said the tour guide Jordan Susselman, whose company, Hi. This Is Barcelona \u2026 , increasingly makes stops in Gl\u00f2ries and adjacent Poblenou. In fact, the city has been trying to invigorate this part of town for some time. Ildefons Cerd\u00e0, the engineer who drew up the 1859 plan for the expansion of Barcelona, envisioned his Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes as a new town center. Instead, Gl\u00f2ries (pronounced GLO-rias), as it\u2019s commonly called, became the aforementioned traffic snarl, a no man\u2019s land at the top point of a triangular swath stretching down to the Mediterranean, encompassing Poblenou, or \u201cnew city,\u201d a longtime manufacturing zone that declined in the 20th century.", "sentence_answer": "The roundabout has been torn down as part of a roadway reconfiguration , making the area more walkable."} +{"question": "What has opened up nearby in December?", "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": "Barcelona Design Museum", "sentence": "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 .", "paragraph_sentence": "Not so long ago, travelers might have stopped in the Gl\u00f2ries area of Barcelona only if they were stuck in traffic. Three major roads leading in and out of this Spanish city \u2014 Avenida Diagonal, Avenida Meridiana and the Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes \u2014 converged here at an elevated roundabout, where cars often came to a standstill. But lately this northeastern axis of the Catalan capital \u2014 situated in the Sant Mart\u00ed district, bordering Eixample \u2014 is becoming a place to go to, not just through, especially for those interested in design. The roundabout has been torn down as part of a roadway reconfiguration, making the area more walkable. And some of the city\u2019s most exciting public spaces have sprung up nearby, including a popular flea market under a modernist metal roof and, opening last December, the Barcelona Design Museum . \u201cThe area is definitely up-and-coming,\u201d said the tour guide Jordan Susselman, whose company, Hi. This Is Barcelona \u2026 , increasingly makes stops in Gl\u00f2ries and adjacent Poblenou. In fact, the city has been trying to invigorate this part of town for some time. Ildefons Cerd\u00e0, the engineer who drew up the 1859 plan for the expansion of Barcelona, envisioned his Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes as a new town center. Instead, Gl\u00f2ries (pronounced GLO-rias), as it\u2019s commonly called, became the aforementioned traffic snarl, a no man\u2019s land at the top point of a triangular swath stretching down to the Mediterranean, encompassing Poblenou, or \u201cnew city,\u201d a longtime manufacturing zone that declined in the 20th century.", "paragraph_answer": "Not so long ago, travelers might have stopped in the Gl\u00f2ries area of Barcelona only if they were stuck in traffic. Three major roads leading in and out of this Spanish city \u2014 Avenida Diagonal, Avenida Meridiana and the Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes \u2014 converged here at an elevated roundabout, where cars often came to a standstill. But lately this northeastern axis of the Catalan capital \u2014 situated in the Sant Mart\u00ed district, bordering Eixample \u2014 is becoming a place to go to, not just through, especially for those interested in design. The roundabout has been torn down as part of a roadway reconfiguration, making the area more walkable. And some of the city\u2019s most exciting public spaces have sprung up nearby, including a popular flea market under a modernist metal roof and, opening last December, the Barcelona Design Museum . \u201cThe area is definitely up-and-coming,\u201d said the tour guide Jordan Susselman, whose company, Hi. This Is Barcelona \u2026 , increasingly makes stops in Gl\u00f2ries and adjacent Poblenou. In fact, the city has been trying to invigorate this part of town for some time. Ildefons Cerd\u00e0, the engineer who drew up the 1859 plan for the expansion of Barcelona, envisioned his Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes as a new town center. Instead, Gl\u00f2ries (pronounced GLO-rias), as it\u2019s commonly called, became the aforementioned traffic snarl, a no man\u2019s land at the top point of a triangular swath stretching down to the Mediterranean, encompassing Poblenou, or \u201cnew city,\u201d a longtime manufacturing zone that declined in the 20th century.", "sentence_answer": "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 ."} +{"question": "In which year did Illdefons Cerda design Barcelona?", "paragraph": "Not so long ago, travelers might have stopped in the Gl\u00f2ries area of Barcelona only if they were stuck in traffic. Three major roads leading in and out of this Spanish city \u2014 Avenida Diagonal, Avenida Meridiana and the Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes \u2014 converged here at an elevated roundabout, where cars often came to a standstill. But lately this northeastern axis of the Catalan capital \u2014 situated in the Sant Mart\u00ed district, bordering Eixample \u2014 is becoming a place to go to, not just through, especially for those interested in design. The roundabout has been torn down as part of a roadway reconfiguration, making the area more walkable. And some of the city\u2019s most exciting public spaces have sprung up nearby, including a popular flea market under a modernist metal roof and, opening last December, the Barcelona Design Museum. \u201cThe area is definitely up-and-coming,\u201d said the tour guide Jordan Susselman, whose company, Hi. This Is Barcelona \u2026 , increasingly makes stops in Gl\u00f2ries and adjacent Poblenou. In fact, the city has been trying to invigorate this part of town for some time. Ildefons Cerd\u00e0, the engineer who drew up the 1859 plan for the expansion of Barcelona, envisioned his Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes as a new town center. Instead, Gl\u00f2ries (pronounced GLO-rias), as it\u2019s commonly called, became the aforementioned traffic snarl, a no man\u2019s land at the top point of a triangular swath stretching down to the Mediterranean, encompassing Poblenou, or \u201cnew city,\u201d a longtime manufacturing zone that declined in the 20th century.", "answer": "1859", "sentence": "Ildefons Cerd\u00e0, the engineer who drew up the 1859 plan for the expansion of Barcelona, envisioned his Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes as a new town center.", "paragraph_sentence": "Not so long ago, travelers might have stopped in the Gl\u00f2ries area of Barcelona only if they were stuck in traffic. Three major roads leading in and out of this Spanish city \u2014 Avenida Diagonal, Avenida Meridiana and the Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes \u2014 converged here at an elevated roundabout, where cars often came to a standstill. But lately this northeastern axis of the Catalan capital \u2014 situated in the Sant Mart\u00ed district, bordering Eixample \u2014 is becoming a place to go to, not just through, especially for those interested in design. The roundabout has been torn down as part of a roadway reconfiguration, making the area more walkable. And some of the city\u2019s most exciting public spaces have sprung up nearby, including a popular flea market under a modernist metal roof and, opening last December, the Barcelona Design Museum. \u201cThe area is definitely up-and-coming,\u201d said the tour guide Jordan Susselman, whose company, Hi. This Is Barcelona \u2026 , increasingly makes stops in Gl\u00f2ries and adjacent Poblenou. In fact, the city has been trying to invigorate this part of town for some time. Ildefons Cerd\u00e0, the engineer who drew up the 1859 plan for the expansion of Barcelona, envisioned his Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes as a new town center. Instead, Gl\u00f2ries (pronounced GLO-rias), as it\u2019s commonly called, became the aforementioned traffic snarl, a no man\u2019s land at the top point of a triangular swath stretching down to the Mediterranean, encompassing Poblenou, or \u201cnew city,\u201d a longtime manufacturing zone that declined in the 20th century.", "paragraph_answer": "Not so long ago, travelers might have stopped in the Gl\u00f2ries area of Barcelona only if they were stuck in traffic. Three major roads leading in and out of this Spanish city \u2014 Avenida Diagonal, Avenida Meridiana and the Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes \u2014 converged here at an elevated roundabout, where cars often came to a standstill. But lately this northeastern axis of the Catalan capital \u2014 situated in the Sant Mart\u00ed district, bordering Eixample \u2014 is becoming a place to go to, not just through, especially for those interested in design. The roundabout has been torn down as part of a roadway reconfiguration, making the area more walkable. And some of the city\u2019s most exciting public spaces have sprung up nearby, including a popular flea market under a modernist metal roof and, opening last December, the Barcelona Design Museum. \u201cThe area is definitely up-and-coming,\u201d said the tour guide Jordan Susselman, whose company, Hi. This Is Barcelona \u2026 , increasingly makes stops in Gl\u00f2ries and adjacent Poblenou. In fact, the city has been trying to invigorate this part of town for some time. Ildefons Cerd\u00e0, the engineer who drew up the 1859 plan for the expansion of Barcelona, envisioned his Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes as a new town center. Instead, Gl\u00f2ries (pronounced GLO-rias), as it\u2019s commonly called, became the aforementioned traffic snarl, a no man\u2019s land at the top point of a triangular swath stretching down to the Mediterranean, encompassing Poblenou, or \u201cnew city,\u201d a longtime manufacturing zone that declined in the 20th century.", "sentence_answer": "Ildefons Cerd\u00e0, the engineer who drew up the 1859 plan for the expansion of Barcelona, envisioned his Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes as a new town center."} +{"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."} +{"question": "Who is the tour guide for the musuem?", "paragraph": "Not so long ago, travelers might have stopped in the Gl\u00f2ries area of Barcelona only if they were stuck in traffic. Three major roads leading in and out of this Spanish city \u2014 Avenida Diagonal, Avenida Meridiana and the Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes \u2014 converged here at an elevated roundabout, where cars often came to a standstill. But lately this northeastern axis of the Catalan capital \u2014 situated in the Sant Mart\u00ed district, bordering Eixample \u2014 is becoming a place to go to, not just through, especially for those interested in design. The roundabout has been torn down as part of a roadway reconfiguration, making the area more walkable. And some of the city\u2019s most exciting public spaces have sprung up nearby, including a popular flea market under a modernist metal roof and, opening last December, the Barcelona Design Museum. \u201cThe area is definitely up-and-coming,\u201d said the tour guide Jordan Susselman, whose company, Hi. This Is Barcelona \u2026 , increasingly makes stops in Gl\u00f2ries and adjacent Poblenou. In fact, the city has been trying to invigorate this part of town for some time. Ildefons Cerd\u00e0, the engineer who drew up the 1859 plan for the expansion of Barcelona, envisioned his Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes as a new town center. Instead, Gl\u00f2ries (pronounced GLO-rias), as it\u2019s commonly called, became the aforementioned traffic snarl, a no man\u2019s land at the top point of a triangular swath stretching down to the Mediterranean, encompassing Poblenou, or \u201cnew city,\u201d a longtime manufacturing zone that declined in the 20th century.", "answer": "Jordan Susselman", "sentence": "\u201cThe area is definitely up-and-coming,\u201d said the tour guide Jordan Susselman ,", "paragraph_sentence": "Not so long ago, travelers might have stopped in the Gl\u00f2ries area of Barcelona only if they were stuck in traffic. Three major roads leading in and out of this Spanish city \u2014 Avenida Diagonal, Avenida Meridiana and the Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes \u2014 converged here at an elevated roundabout, where cars often came to a standstill. But lately this northeastern axis of the Catalan capital \u2014 situated in the Sant Mart\u00ed district, bordering Eixample \u2014 is becoming a place to go to, not just through, especially for those interested in design. The roundabout has been torn down as part of a roadway reconfiguration, making the area more walkable. And some of the city\u2019s most exciting public spaces have sprung up nearby, including a popular flea market under a modernist metal roof and, opening last December, the Barcelona Design Museum. \u201cThe area is definitely up-and-coming,\u201d said the tour guide Jordan Susselman , whose company, Hi. This Is Barcelona \u2026 , increasingly makes stops in Gl\u00f2ries and adjacent Poblenou. In fact, the city has been trying to invigorate this part of town for some time. Ildefons Cerd\u00e0, the engineer who drew up the 1859 plan for the expansion of Barcelona, envisioned his Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes as a new town center. Instead, Gl\u00f2ries (pronounced GLO-rias), as it\u2019s commonly called, became the aforementioned traffic snarl, a no man\u2019s land at the top point of a triangular swath stretching down to the Mediterranean, encompassing Poblenou, or \u201cnew city,\u201d a longtime manufacturing zone that declined in the 20th century.", "paragraph_answer": "Not so long ago, travelers might have stopped in the Gl\u00f2ries area of Barcelona only if they were stuck in traffic. Three major roads leading in and out of this Spanish city \u2014 Avenida Diagonal, Avenida Meridiana and the Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes \u2014 converged here at an elevated roundabout, where cars often came to a standstill. But lately this northeastern axis of the Catalan capital \u2014 situated in the Sant Mart\u00ed district, bordering Eixample \u2014 is becoming a place to go to, not just through, especially for those interested in design. The roundabout has been torn down as part of a roadway reconfiguration, making the area more walkable. And some of the city\u2019s most exciting public spaces have sprung up nearby, including a popular flea market under a modernist metal roof and, opening last December, the Barcelona Design Museum. \u201cThe area is definitely up-and-coming,\u201d said the tour guide Jordan Susselman , whose company, Hi. This Is Barcelona \u2026 , increasingly makes stops in Gl\u00f2ries and adjacent Poblenou. In fact, the city has been trying to invigorate this part of town for some time. Ildefons Cerd\u00e0, the engineer who drew up the 1859 plan for the expansion of Barcelona, envisioned his Pla\u00e7a de les Gl\u00f2ries Catalanes as a new town center. Instead, Gl\u00f2ries (pronounced GLO-rias), as it\u2019s commonly called, became the aforementioned traffic snarl, a no man\u2019s land at the top point of a triangular swath stretching down to the Mediterranean, encompassing Poblenou, or \u201cnew city,\u201d a longtime manufacturing zone that declined in the 20th century.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe area is definitely up-and-coming,\u201d said the tour guide Jordan Susselman ,"} +{"question": "Who was let go by ESPN?", "paragraph": "ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons, if not its final one. Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president, effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website, by announcing that he would not renew his contract. The message was clear: Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand.", "answer": "Bill Simmons", "sentence": "ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons , if not its final one.", "paragraph_sentence": " ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons , if not its final one. Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president, effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website, by announcing that he would not renew his contract. The message was clear: Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand.", "paragraph_answer": "ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons , if not its final one. Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president, effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website, by announcing that he would not renew his contract. The message was clear: Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand.", "sentence_answer": "ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons , if not its final one."} +{"question": "What role does John Skipper play at ESPN?", "paragraph": "ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons, if not its final one. Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president, effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website, by announcing that he would not renew his contract. The message was clear: Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand.", "answer": "president", "sentence": "Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president , effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website, by announcing that he would not renew his contract.", "paragraph_sentence": "ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons, if not its final one. Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president , effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website, by announcing that he would not renew his contract. The message was clear: Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand.", "paragraph_answer": "ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons, if not its final one. Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president , effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website, by announcing that he would not renew his contract. The message was clear: Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand.", "sentence_answer": "Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president , effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website, by announcing that he would not renew his contract."} +{"question": "What did Simmons help to start at ESPN?", "paragraph": "ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons, if not its final one. Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president, effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website, by announcing that he would not renew his contract. The message was clear: Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand.", "answer": "Grantland website", "sentence": "Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president, effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website , by announcing that he would not renew his contract.", "paragraph_sentence": "ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons, if not its final one. Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president, effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website , by announcing that he would not renew his contract. The message was clear: Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand.", "paragraph_answer": "ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons, if not its final one. Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president, effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website , by announcing that he would not renew his contract. The message was clear: Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand.", "sentence_answer": "Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president, effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website , by announcing that he would not renew his contract."} +{"question": "How often does ESPN make a presentation to it's advertisers?", "paragraph": "ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons, if not its final one. Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president, effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website, by announcing that he would not renew his contract. The message was clear: Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand.", "answer": "annual", "sentence": "ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons, if not its final one.", "paragraph_sentence": " ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons, if not its final one. Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president, effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website, by announcing that he would not renew his contract. The message was clear: Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand.", "paragraph_answer": "ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons, if not its final one. Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president, effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website, by announcing that he would not renew his contract. The message was clear: Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand.", "sentence_answer": "ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons, if not its final one."} +{"question": "Who does John Skipper think is bigger than the brand?", "paragraph": "ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons, if not its final one. Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president, effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website, by announcing that he would not renew his contract. The message was clear: Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand.", "answer": "no one", "sentence": "Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand.", "paragraph_sentence": "ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons, if not its final one. Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president, effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website, by announcing that he would not renew his contract. The message was clear: Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand. ", "paragraph_answer": "ESPN will make its annual upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday morning in a Broadway theater, four days after scripting the latest act in its relationship with Bill Simmons, if not its final one. Last Friday, John Skipper, ESPN\u2019s president, effectively fired Simmons, one of the company\u2019s best known employees and the founding editor of its Grantland website, by announcing that he would not renew his contract. The message was clear: Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand.", "sentence_answer": "Regardless of your influence or the number of people who listen to your podcasts, no one is bigger than the brand."} +{"question": "How much is Simmons payed to work for ESPN?", "paragraph": "But do not expect Simmons to say anything, at least about his departure, until he and ESPN are legally done with each other. Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract.", "answer": "$5 million", "sentence": "Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract.", "paragraph_sentence": "But do not expect Simmons to say anything, at least about his departure, until he and ESPN are legally done with each other. Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract. ", "paragraph_answer": "But do not expect Simmons to say anything, at least about his departure, until he and ESPN are legally done with each other. Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract.", "sentence_answer": "Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract."} +{"question": "What is one of the clauses in Simmons contract?", "paragraph": "But do not expect Simmons to say anything, at least about his departure, until he and ESPN are legally done with each other. Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract.", "answer": "nondisparagement", "sentence": "Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract.", "paragraph_sentence": "But do not expect Simmons to say anything, at least about his departure, until he and ESPN are legally done with each other. Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract. ", "paragraph_answer": "But do not expect Simmons to say anything, at least about his departure, until he and ESPN are legally done with each other. Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract.", "sentence_answer": "Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract."} +{"question": "How much of his income does Simmons stand to lose if he says anything before he officially leaves ESPN?", "paragraph": "But do not expect Simmons to say anything, at least about his departure, until he and ESPN are legally done with each other. Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract.", "answer": "a third", "sentence": "Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract.", "paragraph_sentence": "But do not expect Simmons to say anything, at least about his departure, until he and ESPN are legally done with each other. Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract. ", "paragraph_answer": "But do not expect Simmons to say anything, at least about his departure, until he and ESPN are legally done with each other. Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract.", "sentence_answer": "Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract."} +{"question": "When was Simmons contract suppose to end?", "paragraph": "But do not expect Simmons to say anything, at least about his departure, until he and ESPN are legally done with each other. Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract.", "answer": "just over four months", "sentence": "Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract.", "paragraph_sentence": "But do not expect Simmons to say anything, at least about his departure, until he and ESPN are legally done with each other. Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract. ", "paragraph_answer": "But do not expect Simmons to say anything, at least about his departure, until he and ESPN are legally done with each other. Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract.", "sentence_answer": "Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract."} +{"question": "What shouldn't Simmons talk about at this time?", "paragraph": "But do not expect Simmons to say anything, at least about his departure, until he and ESPN are legally done with each other. Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract.", "answer": "his departure", "sentence": "But do not expect Simmons to say anything, at least about his departure , until he and ESPN are legally done with each other.", "paragraph_sentence": " But do not expect Simmons to say anything, at least about his departure , until he and ESPN are legally done with each other. Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract.", "paragraph_answer": "But do not expect Simmons to say anything, at least about his departure , until he and ESPN are legally done with each other. Talent contracts like Simmons\u2019s typically contain nondisparagement clauses, so if Simmons strikes out angrily before negotiating his exit \u2014 if, say, he verbally slapped Skipper or ESPN \u2014 he would forfeit about a third of his estimated $5 million salary, based on just over four months left on his contract.", "sentence_answer": "But do not expect Simmons to say anything, at least about his departure , until he and ESPN are legally done with each other."} +{"question": "Who has a podcast empire?", "paragraph": "Turner is also strong digitally, with much of its focus on continuing to build Bleacher Report. Simmons could create a Grantland-like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus.", "answer": "Simmons", "sentence": "Simmons could create a Grantland-like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus.", "paragraph_sentence": "Turner is also strong digitally, with much of its focus on continuing to build Bleacher Report. Simmons could create a Grantland-like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus. ", "paragraph_answer": "Turner is also strong digitally, with much of its focus on continuing to build Bleacher Report. Simmons could create a Grantland-like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus.", "sentence_answer": " Simmons could create a Grantland-like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus."} +{"question": "What is Turner still focusing on?", "paragraph": "Turner is also strong digitally, with much of its focus on continuing to build Bleacher Report. Simmons could create a Grantland-like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus.", "answer": "Bleacher Report", "sentence": "Turner is also strong digitally, with much of its focus on continuing to build Bleacher Report .", "paragraph_sentence": " Turner is also strong digitally, with much of its focus on continuing to build Bleacher Report . Simmons could create a Grantland-like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus.", "paragraph_answer": "Turner is also strong digitally, with much of its focus on continuing to build Bleacher Report . Simmons could create a Grantland-like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus.", "sentence_answer": "Turner is also strong digitally, with much of its focus on continuing to build Bleacher Report ."} +{"question": "What could Simmons create something similar from?", "paragraph": "Turner is also strong digitally, with much of its focus on continuing to build Bleacher Report. Simmons could create a Grantland-like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus.", "answer": "Grantland", "sentence": "Simmons could create a Grantland -like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus.", "paragraph_sentence": "Turner is also strong digitally, with much of its focus on continuing to build Bleacher Report. Simmons could create a Grantland -like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus. ", "paragraph_answer": "Turner is also strong digitally, with much of its focus on continuing to build Bleacher Report. Simmons could create a Grantland -like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus.", "sentence_answer": "Simmons could create a Grantland -like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus."} +{"question": "Who is a competitor of ESPN?", "paragraph": "Turner is also strong digitally, with much of its focus on continuing to build Bleacher Report. Simmons could create a Grantland-like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus.", "answer": "Turner", "sentence": "Turner is also strong digitally, with much of its focus on continuing to build Bleacher Report.", "paragraph_sentence": " Turner is also strong digitally, with much of its focus on continuing to build Bleacher Report. Simmons could create a Grantland-like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus.", "paragraph_answer": " Turner is also strong digitally, with much of its focus on continuing to build Bleacher Report. Simmons could create a Grantland-like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus.", "sentence_answer": " Turner is also strong digitally, with much of its focus on continuing to build Bleacher Report."} +{"question": "What would be a bonus for Turner if Simmons goes to work for them?", "paragraph": "Turner is also strong digitally, with much of its focus on continuing to build Bleacher Report. Simmons could create a Grantland-like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus.", "answer": "his podcast", "sentence": "Simmons could create a Grantland-like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus.", "paragraph_sentence": "Turner is also strong digitally, with much of its focus on continuing to build Bleacher Report. Simmons could create a Grantland-like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus. ", "paragraph_answer": "Turner is also strong digitally, with much of its focus on continuing to build Bleacher Report. Simmons could create a Grantland-like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus.", "sentence_answer": "Simmons could create a Grantland-like spinoff from Bleacher Report if Turner wants to pit a new version against ESPN\u2019s original, and bring his podcast empire along as a bonus."} +{"question": "Marijuana accounts for how much revenue generated by cartels?", "paragraph": "As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year, according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation. The one thing that could significantly affect the cartels\u2019 marijuana business is legislation in the United States. As marijuana growing for commercial purposes in America expands, demand for Mexican marijuana could eventually dry up. Pro-marijuana activists have scored a remarkable string of election wins in recent years even though the drug remains illegal under federal law. Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have passed laws permitting medical marijuana, and four states also allow recreational use by adults. \u201cIn the long run, as the U.S. legalizes marijuana, Mexico is going to have a tough time competing with lawful American suppliers,\u201d Mr. Walsh said. \u201cThat doesn\u2019t mean they won\u2019t have a business plan, it\u2019s just that marijuana will be removed from it.\u201d", "answer": "more than a fifth", "sentence": "As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year, according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation.", "paragraph_sentence": " As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year, according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation. The one thing that could significantly affect the cartels\u2019 marijuana business is legislation in the United States. As marijuana growing for commercial purposes in America expands, demand for Mexican marijuana could eventually dry up. Pro-marijuana activists have scored a remarkable string of election wins in recent years even though the drug remains illegal under federal law. Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have passed laws permitting medical marijuana, and four states also allow recreational use by adults. \u201cIn the long run, as the U.S. legalizes marijuana, Mexico is going to have a tough time competing with lawful American suppliers,\u201d Mr. Walsh said. \u201cThat doesn\u2019t mean they won\u2019t have a business plan, it\u2019s just that marijuana will be removed from it.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year, according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation. The one thing that could significantly affect the cartels\u2019 marijuana business is legislation in the United States. As marijuana growing for commercial purposes in America expands, demand for Mexican marijuana could eventually dry up. Pro-marijuana activists have scored a remarkable string of election wins in recent years even though the drug remains illegal under federal law. Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have passed laws permitting medical marijuana, and four states also allow recreational use by adults. \u201cIn the long run, as the U.S. legalizes marijuana, Mexico is going to have a tough time competing with lawful American suppliers,\u201d Mr. Walsh said. \u201cThat doesn\u2019t mean they won\u2019t have a business plan, it\u2019s just that marijuana will be removed from it.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year, according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation."} +{"question": "How many states allow the use of medical marijuana?", "paragraph": "As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year, according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation. The one thing that could significantly affect the cartels\u2019 marijuana business is legislation in the United States. As marijuana growing for commercial purposes in America expands, demand for Mexican marijuana could eventually dry up. Pro-marijuana activists have scored a remarkable string of election wins in recent years even though the drug remains illegal under federal law. Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have passed laws permitting medical marijuana, and four states also allow recreational use by adults. \u201cIn the long run, as the U.S. legalizes marijuana, Mexico is going to have a tough time competing with lawful American suppliers,\u201d Mr. Walsh said. \u201cThat doesn\u2019t mean they won\u2019t have a business plan, it\u2019s just that marijuana will be removed from it.\u201d", "answer": "Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia", "sentence": "Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have passed laws permitting medical marijuana, and four states also allow recreational use by adults.", "paragraph_sentence": "As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year, according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation. The one thing that could significantly affect the cartels\u2019 marijuana business is legislation in the United States. As marijuana growing for commercial purposes in America expands, demand for Mexican marijuana could eventually dry up. Pro-marijuana activists have scored a remarkable string of election wins in recent years even though the drug remains illegal under federal law. Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have passed laws permitting medical marijuana, and four states also allow recreational use by adults. \u201cIn the long run, as the U.S. legalizes marijuana, Mexico is going to have a tough time competing with lawful American suppliers,\u201d Mr. Walsh said. \u201cThat doesn\u2019t mean they won\u2019t have a business plan, it\u2019s just that marijuana will be removed from it.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year, according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation. The one thing that could significantly affect the cartels\u2019 marijuana business is legislation in the United States. As marijuana growing for commercial purposes in America expands, demand for Mexican marijuana could eventually dry up. Pro-marijuana activists have scored a remarkable string of election wins in recent years even though the drug remains illegal under federal law. Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have passed laws permitting medical marijuana, and four states also allow recreational use by adults. \u201cIn the long run, as the U.S. legalizes marijuana, Mexico is going to have a tough time competing with lawful American suppliers,\u201d Mr. Walsh said. \u201cThat doesn\u2019t mean they won\u2019t have a business plan, it\u2019s just that marijuana will be removed from it.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have passed laws permitting medical marijuana, and four states also allow recreational use by adults."} +{"question": "How much does this amount to per year?", "paragraph": "As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year, according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation. The one thing that could significantly affect the cartels\u2019 marijuana business is legislation in the United States. As marijuana growing for commercial purposes in America expands, demand for Mexican marijuana could eventually dry up. Pro-marijuana activists have scored a remarkable string of election wins in recent years even though the drug remains illegal under federal law. Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have passed laws permitting medical marijuana, and four states also allow recreational use by adults. \u201cIn the long run, as the U.S. legalizes marijuana, Mexico is going to have a tough time competing with lawful American suppliers,\u201d Mr. Walsh said. \u201cThat doesn\u2019t mean they won\u2019t have a business plan, it\u2019s just that marijuana will be removed from it.\u201d", "answer": "$1.5 billion a year", "sentence": "As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year , according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation.", "paragraph_sentence": " As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year , according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation. The one thing that could significantly affect the cartels\u2019 marijuana business is legislation in the United States. As marijuana growing for commercial purposes in America expands, demand for Mexican marijuana could eventually dry up. Pro-marijuana activists have scored a remarkable string of election wins in recent years even though the drug remains illegal under federal law. Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have passed laws permitting medical marijuana, and four states also allow recreational use by adults. \u201cIn the long run, as the U.S. legalizes marijuana, Mexico is going to have a tough time competing with lawful American suppliers,\u201d Mr. Walsh said. \u201cThat doesn\u2019t mean they won\u2019t have a business plan, it\u2019s just that marijuana will be removed from it.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year , according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation. The one thing that could significantly affect the cartels\u2019 marijuana business is legislation in the United States. As marijuana growing for commercial purposes in America expands, demand for Mexican marijuana could eventually dry up. Pro-marijuana activists have scored a remarkable string of election wins in recent years even though the drug remains illegal under federal law. Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have passed laws permitting medical marijuana, and four states also allow recreational use by adults. \u201cIn the long run, as the U.S. legalizes marijuana, Mexico is going to have a tough time competing with lawful American suppliers,\u201d Mr. Walsh said. \u201cThat doesn\u2019t mean they won\u2019t have a business plan, it\u2019s just that marijuana will be removed from it.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year , according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation."} +{"question": "How many states allow recreational marijuana?", "paragraph": "As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year, according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation. The one thing that could significantly affect the cartels\u2019 marijuana business is legislation in the United States. As marijuana growing for commercial purposes in America expands, demand for Mexican marijuana could eventually dry up. Pro-marijuana activists have scored a remarkable string of election wins in recent years even though the drug remains illegal under federal law. Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have passed laws permitting medical marijuana, and four states also allow recreational use by adults. \u201cIn the long run, as the U.S. legalizes marijuana, Mexico is going to have a tough time competing with lawful American suppliers,\u201d Mr. Walsh said. \u201cThat doesn\u2019t mean they won\u2019t have a business plan, it\u2019s just that marijuana will be removed from it.\u201d", "answer": "four", "sentence": "Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have passed laws permitting medical marijuana, and four states also allow recreational use by adults.", "paragraph_sentence": "As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year, according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation. The one thing that could significantly affect the cartels\u2019 marijuana business is legislation in the United States. As marijuana growing for commercial purposes in America expands, demand for Mexican marijuana could eventually dry up. Pro-marijuana activists have scored a remarkable string of election wins in recent years even though the drug remains illegal under federal law. Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have passed laws permitting medical marijuana, and four states also allow recreational use by adults. \u201cIn the long run, as the U.S. legalizes marijuana, Mexico is going to have a tough time competing with lawful American suppliers,\u201d Mr. Walsh said. \u201cThat doesn\u2019t mean they won\u2019t have a business plan, it\u2019s just that marijuana will be removed from it.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "As it stands, marijuana accounts for more than a fifth of revenues generated by cartels, around $1.5 billion a year, according to a 2010 report by the RAND Corporation. The one thing that could significantly affect the cartels\u2019 marijuana business is legislation in the United States. As marijuana growing for commercial purposes in America expands, demand for Mexican marijuana could eventually dry up. Pro-marijuana activists have scored a remarkable string of election wins in recent years even though the drug remains illegal under federal law. Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have passed laws permitting medical marijuana, and four states also allow recreational use by adults. \u201cIn the long run, as the U.S. legalizes marijuana, Mexico is going to have a tough time competing with lawful American suppliers,\u201d Mr. Walsh said. \u201cThat doesn\u2019t mean they won\u2019t have a business plan, it\u2019s just that marijuana will be removed from it.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have passed laws permitting medical marijuana, and four states also allow recreational use by adults."} +{"question": "Who wrote an 88 page opinion arguing that the state recognizes an individual's right to engage in recreational use?", "paragraph": "Marijuana is just one of many sources of income for the cartels, which smuggle narcotics across the border to the United States and run kidnapping and extortion rings at home. The criminal infrastructure will persist whether or not marijuana use is legal. \u201cThe existing laws don\u2019t reduce violence, either,\u201d said Catalina P\u00e9rez Correa Gonz\u00e1lez, a law professor at CIDE, a university in Mexico City. The legal ruling on Wednesday barely referred to the bloody backdrop of the drug war. Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others.", "answer": "Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar", "sentence": "Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others.", "paragraph_sentence": "Marijuana is just one of many sources of income for the cartels, which smuggle narcotics across the border to the United States and run kidnapping and extortion rings at home. The criminal infrastructure will persist whether or not marijuana use is legal. \u201cThe existing laws don\u2019t reduce violence, either,\u201d said Catalina P\u00e9rez Correa Gonz\u00e1lez, a law professor at CIDE, a university in Mexico City. The legal ruling on Wednesday barely referred to the bloody backdrop of the drug war. Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others. ", "paragraph_answer": "Marijuana is just one of many sources of income for the cartels, which smuggle narcotics across the border to the United States and run kidnapping and extortion rings at home. The criminal infrastructure will persist whether or not marijuana use is legal. \u201cThe existing laws don\u2019t reduce violence, either,\u201d said Catalina P\u00e9rez Correa Gonz\u00e1lez, a law professor at CIDE, a university in Mexico City. The legal ruling on Wednesday barely referred to the bloody backdrop of the drug war. Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others.", "sentence_answer": "Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others."} +{"question": "What will persist whether or not marijuana use is legal?", "paragraph": "Marijuana is just one of many sources of income for the cartels, which smuggle narcotics across the border to the United States and run kidnapping and extortion rings at home. The criminal infrastructure will persist whether or not marijuana use is legal. \u201cThe existing laws don\u2019t reduce violence, either,\u201d said Catalina P\u00e9rez Correa Gonz\u00e1lez, a law professor at CIDE, a university in Mexico City. The legal ruling on Wednesday barely referred to the bloody backdrop of the drug war. Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others.", "answer": "The criminal infrastructure", "sentence": "The criminal infrastructure will persist whether or not marijuana use is legal.", "paragraph_sentence": "Marijuana is just one of many sources of income for the cartels, which smuggle narcotics across the border to the United States and run kidnapping and extortion rings at home. The criminal infrastructure will persist whether or not marijuana use is legal. \u201cThe existing laws don\u2019t reduce violence, either,\u201d said Catalina P\u00e9rez Correa Gonz\u00e1lez, a law professor at CIDE, a university in Mexico City. The legal ruling on Wednesday barely referred to the bloody backdrop of the drug war. Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others.", "paragraph_answer": "Marijuana is just one of many sources of income for the cartels, which smuggle narcotics across the border to the United States and run kidnapping and extortion rings at home. The criminal infrastructure will persist whether or not marijuana use is legal. \u201cThe existing laws don\u2019t reduce violence, either,\u201d said Catalina P\u00e9rez Correa Gonz\u00e1lez, a law professor at CIDE, a university in Mexico City. The legal ruling on Wednesday barely referred to the bloody backdrop of the drug war. Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others.", "sentence_answer": " The criminal infrastructure will persist whether or not marijuana use is legal."} +{"question": "What do cartels do besides smuggle marijuana?", "paragraph": "Marijuana is just one of many sources of income for the cartels, which smuggle narcotics across the border to the United States and run kidnapping and extortion rings at home. The criminal infrastructure will persist whether or not marijuana use is legal. \u201cThe existing laws don\u2019t reduce violence, either,\u201d said Catalina P\u00e9rez Correa Gonz\u00e1lez, a law professor at CIDE, a university in Mexico City. The legal ruling on Wednesday barely referred to the bloody backdrop of the drug war. Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others.", "answer": "smuggle narcotics across the border to the United States and run kidnapping and extortion rings at home", "sentence": "Marijuana is just one of many sources of income for the cartels, which smuggle narcotics across the border to the United States and run kidnapping and extortion rings at home .", "paragraph_sentence": " Marijuana is just one of many sources of income for the cartels, which smuggle narcotics across the border to the United States and run kidnapping and extortion rings at home . The criminal infrastructure will persist whether or not marijuana use is legal. \u201cThe existing laws don\u2019t reduce violence, either,\u201d said Catalina P\u00e9rez Correa Gonz\u00e1lez, a law professor at CIDE, a university in Mexico City. The legal ruling on Wednesday barely referred to the bloody backdrop of the drug war. Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others.", "paragraph_answer": "Marijuana is just one of many sources of income for the cartels, which smuggle narcotics across the border to the United States and run kidnapping and extortion rings at home . The criminal infrastructure will persist whether or not marijuana use is legal. \u201cThe existing laws don\u2019t reduce violence, either,\u201d said Catalina P\u00e9rez Correa Gonz\u00e1lez, a law professor at CIDE, a university in Mexico City. The legal ruling on Wednesday barely referred to the bloody backdrop of the drug war. Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others.", "sentence_answer": "Marijuana is just one of many sources of income for the cartels, which smuggle narcotics across the border to the United States and run kidnapping and extortion rings at home ."} +{"question": "The legal ruling barely eluded to what?", "paragraph": "Marijuana is just one of many sources of income for the cartels, which smuggle narcotics across the border to the United States and run kidnapping and extortion rings at home. The criminal infrastructure will persist whether or not marijuana use is legal. \u201cThe existing laws don\u2019t reduce violence, either,\u201d said Catalina P\u00e9rez Correa Gonz\u00e1lez, a law professor at CIDE, a university in Mexico City. The legal ruling on Wednesday barely referred to the bloody backdrop of the drug war. Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others.", "answer": "the bloody backdrop of the drug war.", "sentence": "The legal ruling on Wednesday barely referred to the bloody backdrop of the drug war. Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others.", "paragraph_sentence": "Marijuana is just one of many sources of income for the cartels, which smuggle narcotics across the border to the United States and run kidnapping and extortion rings at home. The criminal infrastructure will persist whether or not marijuana use is legal. \u201cThe existing laws don\u2019t reduce violence, either,\u201d said Catalina P\u00e9rez Correa Gonz\u00e1lez, a law professor at CIDE, a university in Mexico City. The legal ruling on Wednesday barely referred to the bloody backdrop of the drug war. Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others. ", "paragraph_answer": "Marijuana is just one of many sources of income for the cartels, which smuggle narcotics across the border to the United States and run kidnapping and extortion rings at home. The criminal infrastructure will persist whether or not marijuana use is legal. \u201cThe existing laws don\u2019t reduce violence, either,\u201d said Catalina P\u00e9rez Correa Gonz\u00e1lez, a law professor at CIDE, a university in Mexico City. The legal ruling on Wednesday barely referred to the bloody backdrop of the drug war. Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others.", "sentence_answer": "The legal ruling on Wednesday barely referred to the bloody backdrop of the drug war. Instead, Justice Arturo Zald\u00edvar wrote an 88-page opinion based on principles of human rights, arguing that the state recognizes an individual\u2019s autonomy to engage in recreational activities that do not harm others."} +{"question": "How many Mexicans smoked marijuana in the past year?", "paragraph": "The number of marijuana users in Mexico is believed to be small. One 2011 drug-use survey estimated that 2 percent of Mexicans had smoked marijuana in the past year. Although that figure is probably low, it is less than the 7.5 percent of people in the United States who said in a 2013 survey that they had used marijuana in the previous month. If Mexicans are allowed to grow and consume their own marijuana, casual users will not have to commit a crime to obtain it. Now, marijuana users are currently vulnerable to extortion by the police and are locked up by the thousands every year on charges of consumption and possession. \u201cThere is an enormous institutional and social cost to enforcing the laws against marijuana,\u201d said Ms. P\u00e9rez Correa, whose surveys of state and federal prisons suggest that 60 percent of the inmates sentenced for drug crimes were convicted in cases involving marijuana. \u201cHow many resources are being used up to reduce these low-impact crimes?\u201d The ruling on Wednesday was the culmination of an effort to change the law by four members of a prominent Mexican anticrime group, Mexico United Against Crime.", "answer": "2 percent", "sentence": "One 2011 drug-use survey estimated that 2 percent of Mexicans had smoked marijuana in the past year.", "paragraph_sentence": "The number of marijuana users in Mexico is believed to be small. One 2011 drug-use survey estimated that 2 percent of Mexicans had smoked marijuana in the past year. Although that figure is probably low, it is less than the 7.5 percent of people in the United States who said in a 2013 survey that they had used marijuana in the previous month. If Mexicans are allowed to grow and consume their own marijuana, casual users will not have to commit a crime to obtain it. Now, marijuana users are currently vulnerable to extortion by the police and are locked up by the thousands every year on charges of consumption and possession. \u201cThere is an enormous institutional and social cost to enforcing the laws against marijuana,\u201d said Ms. P\u00e9rez Correa, whose surveys of state and federal prisons suggest that 60 percent of the inmates sentenced for drug crimes were convicted in cases involving marijuana. \u201cHow many resources are being used up to reduce these low-impact crimes?\u201d The ruling on Wednesday was the culmination of an effort to change the law by four members of a prominent Mexican anticrime group, Mexico United Against Crime.", "paragraph_answer": "The number of marijuana users in Mexico is believed to be small. One 2011 drug-use survey estimated that 2 percent of Mexicans had smoked marijuana in the past year. Although that figure is probably low, it is less than the 7.5 percent of people in the United States who said in a 2013 survey that they had used marijuana in the previous month. If Mexicans are allowed to grow and consume their own marijuana, casual users will not have to commit a crime to obtain it. Now, marijuana users are currently vulnerable to extortion by the police and are locked up by the thousands every year on charges of consumption and possession. \u201cThere is an enormous institutional and social cost to enforcing the laws against marijuana,\u201d said Ms. P\u00e9rez Correa, whose surveys of state and federal prisons suggest that 60 percent of the inmates sentenced for drug crimes were convicted in cases involving marijuana. \u201cHow many resources are being used up to reduce these low-impact crimes?\u201d The ruling on Wednesday was the culmination of an effort to change the law by four members of a prominent Mexican anticrime group, Mexico United Against Crime.", "sentence_answer": "One 2011 drug-use survey estimated that 2 percent of Mexicans had smoked marijuana in the past year."} +{"question": "What will allow Mexicans to be able to smoke marijuana without buying or selling it?", "paragraph": "The number of marijuana users in Mexico is believed to be small. One 2011 drug-use survey estimated that 2 percent of Mexicans had smoked marijuana in the past year. Although that figure is probably low, it is less than the 7.5 percent of people in the United States who said in a 2013 survey that they had used marijuana in the previous month. If Mexicans are allowed to grow and consume their own marijuana, casual users will not have to commit a crime to obtain it. Now, marijuana users are currently vulnerable to extortion by the police and are locked up by the thousands every year on charges of consumption and possession. \u201cThere is an enormous institutional and social cost to enforcing the laws against marijuana,\u201d said Ms. P\u00e9rez Correa, whose surveys of state and federal prisons suggest that 60 percent of the inmates sentenced for drug crimes were convicted in cases involving marijuana. \u201cHow many resources are being used up to reduce these low-impact crimes?\u201d The ruling on Wednesday was the culmination of an effort to change the law by four members of a prominent Mexican anticrime group, Mexico United Against Crime.", "answer": "If Mexicans are allowed to grow and consume their own marijuana,", "sentence": "If Mexicans are allowed to grow and consume their own marijuana, casual users will not have to commit a crime to obtain it.", "paragraph_sentence": "The number of marijuana users in Mexico is believed to be small. One 2011 drug-use survey estimated that 2 percent of Mexicans had smoked marijuana in the past year. Although that figure is probably low, it is less than the 7.5 percent of people in the United States who said in a 2013 survey that they had used marijuana in the previous month. If Mexicans are allowed to grow and consume their own marijuana, casual users will not have to commit a crime to obtain it. Now, marijuana users are currently vulnerable to extortion by the police and are locked up by the thousands every year on charges of consumption and possession. \u201cThere is an enormous institutional and social cost to enforcing the laws against marijuana,\u201d said Ms. P\u00e9rez Correa, whose surveys of state and federal prisons suggest that 60 percent of the inmates sentenced for drug crimes were convicted in cases involving marijuana. \u201cHow many resources are being used up to reduce these low-impact crimes?\u201d The ruling on Wednesday was the culmination of an effort to change the law by four members of a prominent Mexican anticrime group, Mexico United Against Crime.", "paragraph_answer": "The number of marijuana users in Mexico is believed to be small. One 2011 drug-use survey estimated that 2 percent of Mexicans had smoked marijuana in the past year. Although that figure is probably low, it is less than the 7.5 percent of people in the United States who said in a 2013 survey that they had used marijuana in the previous month. If Mexicans are allowed to grow and consume their own marijuana, casual users will not have to commit a crime to obtain it. Now, marijuana users are currently vulnerable to extortion by the police and are locked up by the thousands every year on charges of consumption and possession. \u201cThere is an enormous institutional and social cost to enforcing the laws against marijuana,\u201d said Ms. P\u00e9rez Correa, whose surveys of state and federal prisons suggest that 60 percent of the inmates sentenced for drug crimes were convicted in cases involving marijuana. \u201cHow many resources are being used up to reduce these low-impact crimes?\u201d The ruling on Wednesday was the culmination of an effort to change the law by four members of a prominent Mexican anticrime group, Mexico United Against Crime.", "sentence_answer": " If Mexicans are allowed to grow and consume their own marijuana, casual users will not have to commit a crime to obtain it."} +{"question": "How many Americans smoked marijuana in the past year?", "paragraph": "The number of marijuana users in Mexico is believed to be small. One 2011 drug-use survey estimated that 2 percent of Mexicans had smoked marijuana in the past year. Although that figure is probably low, it is less than the 7.5 percent of people in the United States who said in a 2013 survey that they had used marijuana in the previous month. If Mexicans are allowed to grow and consume their own marijuana, casual users will not have to commit a crime to obtain it. Now, marijuana users are currently vulnerable to extortion by the police and are locked up by the thousands every year on charges of consumption and possession. \u201cThere is an enormous institutional and social cost to enforcing the laws against marijuana,\u201d said Ms. P\u00e9rez Correa, whose surveys of state and federal prisons suggest that 60 percent of the inmates sentenced for drug crimes were convicted in cases involving marijuana. \u201cHow many resources are being used up to reduce these low-impact crimes?\u201d The ruling on Wednesday was the culmination of an effort to change the law by four members of a prominent Mexican anticrime group, Mexico United Against Crime.", "answer": "7.5 percent", "sentence": "Although that figure is probably low, it is less than the 7.5 percent of people in the United States who said in a 2013 survey that they had used marijuana in the previous month.", "paragraph_sentence": "The number of marijuana users in Mexico is believed to be small. One 2011 drug-use survey estimated that 2 percent of Mexicans had smoked marijuana in the past year. Although that figure is probably low, it is less than the 7.5 percent of people in the United States who said in a 2013 survey that they had used marijuana in the previous month. If Mexicans are allowed to grow and consume their own marijuana, casual users will not have to commit a crime to obtain it. Now, marijuana users are currently vulnerable to extortion by the police and are locked up by the thousands every year on charges of consumption and possession. \u201cThere is an enormous institutional and social cost to enforcing the laws against marijuana,\u201d said Ms. P\u00e9rez Correa, whose surveys of state and federal prisons suggest that 60 percent of the inmates sentenced for drug crimes were convicted in cases involving marijuana. \u201cHow many resources are being used up to reduce these low-impact crimes?\u201d The ruling on Wednesday was the culmination of an effort to change the law by four members of a prominent Mexican anticrime group, Mexico United Against Crime.", "paragraph_answer": "The number of marijuana users in Mexico is believed to be small. One 2011 drug-use survey estimated that 2 percent of Mexicans had smoked marijuana in the past year. Although that figure is probably low, it is less than the 7.5 percent of people in the United States who said in a 2013 survey that they had used marijuana in the previous month. If Mexicans are allowed to grow and consume their own marijuana, casual users will not have to commit a crime to obtain it. Now, marijuana users are currently vulnerable to extortion by the police and are locked up by the thousands every year on charges of consumption and possession. \u201cThere is an enormous institutional and social cost to enforcing the laws against marijuana,\u201d said Ms. P\u00e9rez Correa, whose surveys of state and federal prisons suggest that 60 percent of the inmates sentenced for drug crimes were convicted in cases involving marijuana. \u201cHow many resources are being used up to reduce these low-impact crimes?\u201d The ruling on Wednesday was the culmination of an effort to change the law by four members of a prominent Mexican anticrime group, Mexico United Against Crime.", "sentence_answer": "Although that figure is probably low, it is less than the 7.5 percent of people in the United States who said in a 2013 survey that they had used marijuana in the previous month."} +{"question": "What percent of inmates sentenced for drug crimes were convicted for marijuana?", "paragraph": "The number of marijuana users in Mexico is believed to be small. One 2011 drug-use survey estimated that 2 percent of Mexicans had smoked marijuana in the past year. Although that figure is probably low, it is less than the 7.5 percent of people in the United States who said in a 2013 survey that they had used marijuana in the previous month. If Mexicans are allowed to grow and consume their own marijuana, casual users will not have to commit a crime to obtain it. Now, marijuana users are currently vulnerable to extortion by the police and are locked up by the thousands every year on charges of consumption and possession. \u201cThere is an enormous institutional and social cost to enforcing the laws against marijuana,\u201d said Ms. P\u00e9rez Correa, whose surveys of state and federal prisons suggest that 60 percent of the inmates sentenced for drug crimes were convicted in cases involving marijuana. \u201cHow many resources are being used up to reduce these low-impact crimes?\u201d The ruling on Wednesday was the culmination of an effort to change the law by four members of a prominent Mexican anticrime group, Mexico United Against Crime.", "answer": "60 percent", "sentence": "\u201cThere is an enormous institutional and social cost to enforcing the laws against marijuana,\u201d said Ms. P\u00e9rez Correa, whose surveys of state and federal prisons suggest that 60 percent of the inmates sentenced for drug crimes were convicted in cases involving marijuana.", "paragraph_sentence": "The number of marijuana users in Mexico is believed to be small. One 2011 drug-use survey estimated that 2 percent of Mexicans had smoked marijuana in the past year. Although that figure is probably low, it is less than the 7.5 percent of people in the United States who said in a 2013 survey that they had used marijuana in the previous month. If Mexicans are allowed to grow and consume their own marijuana, casual users will not have to commit a crime to obtain it. Now, marijuana users are currently vulnerable to extortion by the police and are locked up by the thousands every year on charges of consumption and possession. \u201cThere is an enormous institutional and social cost to enforcing the laws against marijuana,\u201d said Ms. P\u00e9rez Correa, whose surveys of state and federal prisons suggest that 60 percent of the inmates sentenced for drug crimes were convicted in cases involving marijuana. \u201cHow many resources are being used up to reduce these low-impact crimes?\u201d The ruling on Wednesday was the culmination of an effort to change the law by four members of a prominent Mexican anticrime group, Mexico United Against Crime.", "paragraph_answer": "The number of marijuana users in Mexico is believed to be small. One 2011 drug-use survey estimated that 2 percent of Mexicans had smoked marijuana in the past year. Although that figure is probably low, it is less than the 7.5 percent of people in the United States who said in a 2013 survey that they had used marijuana in the previous month. If Mexicans are allowed to grow and consume their own marijuana, casual users will not have to commit a crime to obtain it. Now, marijuana users are currently vulnerable to extortion by the police and are locked up by the thousands every year on charges of consumption and possession. \u201cThere is an enormous institutional and social cost to enforcing the laws against marijuana,\u201d said Ms. P\u00e9rez Correa, whose surveys of state and federal prisons suggest that 60 percent of the inmates sentenced for drug crimes were convicted in cases involving marijuana. \u201cHow many resources are being used up to reduce these low-impact crimes?\u201d The ruling on Wednesday was the culmination of an effort to change the law by four members of a prominent Mexican anticrime group, Mexico United Against Crime.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThere is an enormous institutional and social cost to enforcing the laws against marijuana,\u201d said Ms. P\u00e9rez Correa, whose surveys of state and federal prisons suggest that 60 percent of the inmates sentenced for drug crimes were convicted in cases involving marijuana."} +{"question": "Who works as a public advocate, in the passage?", "paragraph": "The Stonewall is not architecturally distinguished and would not earn landmark status on aesthetic grounds, several speakers noted. The Stonewall was already part of the city-designated Greenwich Village Historic District, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. But speakers at the hearing said the individual city landmark designation was necessary to preserve the Stonewall and recognize its historic importance. \u201cIt must be protected against rapacious developers who would destroy the history of this sacred place and all it represents,\u201d Letitia James, the city\u2019s public advocate, said.", "answer": "Letitia James", "sentence": "\u201cIt must be protected against rapacious developers who would destroy the history of this sacred place and all it represents,\u201d Letitia James , the city\u2019s public advocate, said.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Stonewall is not architecturally distinguished and would not earn landmark status on aesthetic grounds, several speakers noted. The Stonewall was already part of the city-designated Greenwich Village Historic District, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. But speakers at the hearing said the individual city landmark designation was necessary to preserve the Stonewall and recognize its historic importance. \u201cIt must be protected against rapacious developers who would destroy the history of this sacred place and all it represents,\u201d Letitia James , the city\u2019s public advocate, said. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Stonewall is not architecturally distinguished and would not earn landmark status on aesthetic grounds, several speakers noted. The Stonewall was already part of the city-designated Greenwich Village Historic District, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. But speakers at the hearing said the individual city landmark designation was necessary to preserve the Stonewall and recognize its historic importance. \u201cIt must be protected against rapacious developers who would destroy the history of this sacred place and all it represents,\u201d Letitia James , the city\u2019s public advocate, said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt must be protected against rapacious developers who would destroy the history of this sacred place and all it represents,\u201d Letitia James , the city\u2019s public advocate, said."} +{"question": "The National Register of Historic Places was updated with the location in question in what year?", "paragraph": "The Stonewall is not architecturally distinguished and would not earn landmark status on aesthetic grounds, several speakers noted. The Stonewall was already part of the city-designated Greenwich Village Historic District, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. But speakers at the hearing said the individual city landmark designation was necessary to preserve the Stonewall and recognize its historic importance. \u201cIt must be protected against rapacious developers who would destroy the history of this sacred place and all it represents,\u201d Letitia James, the city\u2019s public advocate, said.", "answer": "1999", "sentence": "The Stonewall was already part of the city-designated Greenwich Village Historic District, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999 .", "paragraph_sentence": "The Stonewall is not architecturally distinguished and would not earn landmark status on aesthetic grounds, several speakers noted. The Stonewall was already part of the city-designated Greenwich Village Historic District, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999 . But speakers at the hearing said the individual city landmark designation was necessary to preserve the Stonewall and recognize its historic importance. \u201cIt must be protected against rapacious developers who would destroy the history of this sacred place and all it represents,\u201d Letitia James, the city\u2019s public advocate, said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Stonewall is not architecturally distinguished and would not earn landmark status on aesthetic grounds, several speakers noted. The Stonewall was already part of the city-designated Greenwich Village Historic District, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999 . But speakers at the hearing said the individual city landmark designation was necessary to preserve the Stonewall and recognize its historic importance. \u201cIt must be protected against rapacious developers who would destroy the history of this sacred place and all it represents,\u201d Letitia James, the city\u2019s public advocate, said.", "sentence_answer": "The Stonewall was already part of the city-designated Greenwich Village Historic District, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999 ."} +{"question": "Which area operates a policy that creates \"historic districts\" within it?", "paragraph": "The Stonewall is not architecturally distinguished and would not earn landmark status on aesthetic grounds, several speakers noted. The Stonewall was already part of the city-designated Greenwich Village Historic District, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. But speakers at the hearing said the individual city landmark designation was necessary to preserve the Stonewall and recognize its historic importance. \u201cIt must be protected against rapacious developers who would destroy the history of this sacred place and all it represents,\u201d Letitia James, the city\u2019s public advocate, said.", "answer": "Greenwich Village", "sentence": "The Stonewall was already part of the city-designated Greenwich Village Historic District, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Stonewall is not architecturally distinguished and would not earn landmark status on aesthetic grounds, several speakers noted. The Stonewall was already part of the city-designated Greenwich Village Historic District, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. But speakers at the hearing said the individual city landmark designation was necessary to preserve the Stonewall and recognize its historic importance. \u201cIt must be protected against rapacious developers who would destroy the history of this sacred place and all it represents,\u201d Letitia James, the city\u2019s public advocate, said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Stonewall is not architecturally distinguished and would not earn landmark status on aesthetic grounds, several speakers noted. The Stonewall was already part of the city-designated Greenwich Village Historic District, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. But speakers at the hearing said the individual city landmark designation was necessary to preserve the Stonewall and recognize its historic importance. \u201cIt must be protected against rapacious developers who would destroy the history of this sacred place and all it represents,\u201d Letitia James, the city\u2019s public advocate, said.", "sentence_answer": "The Stonewall was already part of the city-designated Greenwich Village Historic District, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999."} +{"question": "What is the shortest name for the building that appears to be the topic of the reading?", "paragraph": "The Stonewall is not architecturally distinguished and would not earn landmark status on aesthetic grounds, several speakers noted. The Stonewall was already part of the city-designated Greenwich Village Historic District, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. But speakers at the hearing said the individual city landmark designation was necessary to preserve the Stonewall and recognize its historic importance. \u201cIt must be protected against rapacious developers who would destroy the history of this sacred place and all it represents,\u201d Letitia James, the city\u2019s public advocate, said.", "answer": "Stonewall", "sentence": "The Stonewall is not architecturally distinguished and would not earn landmark status on aesthetic grounds, several speakers noted.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Stonewall is not architecturally distinguished and would not earn landmark status on aesthetic grounds, several speakers noted. The Stonewall was already part of the city-designated Greenwich Village Historic District, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. But speakers at the hearing said the individual city landmark designation was necessary to preserve the Stonewall and recognize its historic importance. \u201cIt must be protected against rapacious developers who would destroy the history of this sacred place and all it represents,\u201d Letitia James, the city\u2019s public advocate, said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Stonewall is not architecturally distinguished and would not earn landmark status on aesthetic grounds, several speakers noted. The Stonewall was already part of the city-designated Greenwich Village Historic District, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. But speakers at the hearing said the individual city landmark designation was necessary to preserve the Stonewall and recognize its historic importance. \u201cIt must be protected against rapacious developers who would destroy the history of this sacred place and all it represents,\u201d Letitia James, the city\u2019s public advocate, said.", "sentence_answer": "The Stonewall is not architecturally distinguished and would not earn landmark status on aesthetic grounds, several speakers noted."} +{"question": "This building would not be able to earn landmark status for what specific reason?", "paragraph": "The Stonewall is not architecturally distinguished and would not earn landmark status on aesthetic grounds, several speakers noted. The Stonewall was already part of the city-designated Greenwich Village Historic District, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. But speakers at the hearing said the individual city landmark designation was necessary to preserve the Stonewall and recognize its historic importance. \u201cIt must be protected against rapacious developers who would destroy the history of this sacred place and all it represents,\u201d Letitia James, the city\u2019s public advocate, said.", "answer": "aesthetic grounds", "sentence": "The Stonewall is not architecturally distinguished and would not earn landmark status on aesthetic grounds , several speakers noted.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Stonewall is not architecturally distinguished and would not earn landmark status on aesthetic grounds , several speakers noted. The Stonewall was already part of the city-designated Greenwich Village Historic District, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. But speakers at the hearing said the individual city landmark designation was necessary to preserve the Stonewall and recognize its historic importance. \u201cIt must be protected against rapacious developers who would destroy the history of this sacred place and all it represents,\u201d Letitia James, the city\u2019s public advocate, said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Stonewall is not architecturally distinguished and would not earn landmark status on aesthetic grounds , several speakers noted. The Stonewall was already part of the city-designated Greenwich Village Historic District, and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. But speakers at the hearing said the individual city landmark designation was necessary to preserve the Stonewall and recognize its historic importance. \u201cIt must be protected against rapacious developers who would destroy the history of this sacred place and all it represents,\u201d Letitia James, the city\u2019s public advocate, said.", "sentence_answer": "The Stonewall is not architecturally distinguished and would not earn landmark status on aesthetic grounds , several speakers noted."} +{"question": "What Japanese director was a great, prolific artist?", "paragraph": "The Japanese director Kenji Mizoguchi (1898-1956) was not only a great artist, but he was also an unusually prolific one. By 1939, the year he completed \u201cThe Story of the Last Chrysanthemum,\u201d a breathtaking melodrama opening in a new restoration Friday, he had over 50 films to his credit. Yet, it was only with his 1936 feature \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d that, by some accounts, Mr. Mizoguchi felt he had finally found his artistic footing. \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d set in late 19th-century Japan, tells the story of Kikunosuke (Shotaro Hanayagi), an egotistic Kabuki actor, and Otoku (Kakuko Mori), who sacrifices her own happiness to help him achieve greatness.", "answer": "Kenji Mizoguchi", "sentence": "The Japanese director Kenji Mizoguchi (1898-1956) was not only a great artist, but he was also an unusually prolific one.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Japanese director Kenji Mizoguchi (1898-1956) was not only a great artist, but he was also an unusually prolific one. By 1939, the year he completed \u201cThe Story of the Last Chrysanthemum,\u201d a breathtaking melodrama opening in a new restoration Friday, he had over 50 films to his credit. Yet, it was only with his 1936 feature \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d that, by some accounts, Mr. Mizoguchi felt he had finally found his artistic footing. \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d set in late 19th-century Japan, tells the story of Kikunosuke (Shotaro Hanayagi), an egotistic Kabuki actor, and Otoku (Kakuko Mori), who sacrifices her own happiness to help him achieve greatness.", "paragraph_answer": "The Japanese director Kenji Mizoguchi (1898-1956) was not only a great artist, but he was also an unusually prolific one. By 1939, the year he completed \u201cThe Story of the Last Chrysanthemum,\u201d a breathtaking melodrama opening in a new restoration Friday, he had over 50 films to his credit. Yet, it was only with his 1936 feature \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d that, by some accounts, Mr. Mizoguchi felt he had finally found his artistic footing. \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d set in late 19th-century Japan, tells the story of Kikunosuke (Shotaro Hanayagi), an egotistic Kabuki actor, and Otoku (Kakuko Mori), who sacrifices her own happiness to help him achieve greatness.", "sentence_answer": "The Japanese director Kenji Mizoguchi (1898-1956) was not only a great artist, but he was also an unusually prolific one."} +{"question": "When was \"The Story of the Last Chrysanthemum\" completed?", "paragraph": "The Japanese director Kenji Mizoguchi (1898-1956) was not only a great artist, but he was also an unusually prolific one. By 1939, the year he completed \u201cThe Story of the Last Chrysanthemum,\u201d a breathtaking melodrama opening in a new restoration Friday, he had over 50 films to his credit. Yet, it was only with his 1936 feature \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d that, by some accounts, Mr. Mizoguchi felt he had finally found his artistic footing. \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d set in late 19th-century Japan, tells the story of Kikunosuke (Shotaro Hanayagi), an egotistic Kabuki actor, and Otoku (Kakuko Mori), who sacrifices her own happiness to help him achieve greatness.", "answer": "1939", "sentence": "By 1939 , the year he completed \u201cThe Story of the Last Chrysanthemum,\u201d a breathtaking melodrama opening in a new restoration Friday, he had over 50 films to his credit.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Japanese director Kenji Mizoguchi (1898-1956) was not only a great artist, but he was also an unusually prolific one. By 1939 , the year he completed \u201cThe Story of the Last Chrysanthemum,\u201d a breathtaking melodrama opening in a new restoration Friday, he had over 50 films to his credit. Yet, it was only with his 1936 feature \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d that, by some accounts, Mr. Mizoguchi felt he had finally found his artistic footing. \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d set in late 19th-century Japan, tells the story of Kikunosuke (Shotaro Hanayagi), an egotistic Kabuki actor, and Otoku (Kakuko Mori), who sacrifices her own happiness to help him achieve greatness.", "paragraph_answer": "The Japanese director Kenji Mizoguchi (1898-1956) was not only a great artist, but he was also an unusually prolific one. By 1939 , the year he completed \u201cThe Story of the Last Chrysanthemum,\u201d a breathtaking melodrama opening in a new restoration Friday, he had over 50 films to his credit. Yet, it was only with his 1936 feature \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d that, by some accounts, Mr. Mizoguchi felt he had finally found his artistic footing. \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d set in late 19th-century Japan, tells the story of Kikunosuke (Shotaro Hanayagi), an egotistic Kabuki actor, and Otoku (Kakuko Mori), who sacrifices her own happiness to help him achieve greatness.", "sentence_answer": "By 1939 , the year he completed \u201cThe Story of the Last Chrysanthemum,\u201d a breathtaking melodrama opening in a new restoration Friday, he had over 50 films to his credit."} +{"question": "How many films did Kenji Mizoguchi have to his credit?", "paragraph": "The Japanese director Kenji Mizoguchi (1898-1956) was not only a great artist, but he was also an unusually prolific one. By 1939, the year he completed \u201cThe Story of the Last Chrysanthemum,\u201d a breathtaking melodrama opening in a new restoration Friday, he had over 50 films to his credit. Yet, it was only with his 1936 feature \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d that, by some accounts, Mr. Mizoguchi felt he had finally found his artistic footing. \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d set in late 19th-century Japan, tells the story of Kikunosuke (Shotaro Hanayagi), an egotistic Kabuki actor, and Otoku (Kakuko Mori), who sacrifices her own happiness to help him achieve greatness.", "answer": "50 films", "sentence": "By 1939, the year he completed \u201cThe Story of the Last Chrysanthemum,\u201d a breathtaking melodrama opening in a new restoration Friday, he had over 50 films to his credit.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Japanese director Kenji Mizoguchi (1898-1956) was not only a great artist, but he was also an unusually prolific one. By 1939, the year he completed \u201cThe Story of the Last Chrysanthemum,\u201d a breathtaking melodrama opening in a new restoration Friday, he had over 50 films to his credit. Yet, it was only with his 1936 feature \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d that, by some accounts, Mr. Mizoguchi felt he had finally found his artistic footing. \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d set in late 19th-century Japan, tells the story of Kikunosuke (Shotaro Hanayagi), an egotistic Kabuki actor, and Otoku (Kakuko Mori), who sacrifices her own happiness to help him achieve greatness.", "paragraph_answer": "The Japanese director Kenji Mizoguchi (1898-1956) was not only a great artist, but he was also an unusually prolific one. By 1939, the year he completed \u201cThe Story of the Last Chrysanthemum,\u201d a breathtaking melodrama opening in a new restoration Friday, he had over 50 films to his credit. Yet, it was only with his 1936 feature \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d that, by some accounts, Mr. Mizoguchi felt he had finally found his artistic footing. \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d set in late 19th-century Japan, tells the story of Kikunosuke (Shotaro Hanayagi), an egotistic Kabuki actor, and Otoku (Kakuko Mori), who sacrifices her own happiness to help him achieve greatness.", "sentence_answer": "By 1939, the year he completed \u201cThe Story of the Last Chrysanthemum,\u201d a breathtaking melodrama opening in a new restoration Friday, he had over 50 films to his credit."} +{"question": "What film helped Kenji Mizoguchi find his footing?", "paragraph": "The Japanese director Kenji Mizoguchi (1898-1956) was not only a great artist, but he was also an unusually prolific one. By 1939, the year he completed \u201cThe Story of the Last Chrysanthemum,\u201d a breathtaking melodrama opening in a new restoration Friday, he had over 50 films to his credit. Yet, it was only with his 1936 feature \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d that, by some accounts, Mr. Mizoguchi felt he had finally found his artistic footing. \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d set in late 19th-century Japan, tells the story of Kikunosuke (Shotaro Hanayagi), an egotistic Kabuki actor, and Otoku (Kakuko Mori), who sacrifices her own happiness to help him achieve greatness.", "answer": "\u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d", "sentence": "Yet, it was only with his 1936 feature \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d that, by some accounts, Mr. Mizoguchi felt he had finally found his artistic footing.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Japanese director Kenji Mizoguchi (1898-1956) was not only a great artist, but he was also an unusually prolific one. By 1939, the year he completed \u201cThe Story of the Last Chrysanthemum,\u201d a breathtaking melodrama opening in a new restoration Friday, he had over 50 films to his credit. Yet, it was only with his 1936 feature \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d that, by some accounts, Mr. Mizoguchi felt he had finally found his artistic footing. \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d set in late 19th-century Japan, tells the story of Kikunosuke (Shotaro Hanayagi), an egotistic Kabuki actor, and Otoku (Kakuko Mori), who sacrifices her own happiness to help him achieve greatness.", "paragraph_answer": "The Japanese director Kenji Mizoguchi (1898-1956) was not only a great artist, but he was also an unusually prolific one. By 1939, the year he completed \u201cThe Story of the Last Chrysanthemum,\u201d a breathtaking melodrama opening in a new restoration Friday, he had over 50 films to his credit. Yet, it was only with his 1936 feature \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d that, by some accounts, Mr. Mizoguchi felt he had finally found his artistic footing. \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d set in late 19th-century Japan, tells the story of Kikunosuke (Shotaro Hanayagi), an egotistic Kabuki actor, and Otoku (Kakuko Mori), who sacrifices her own happiness to help him achieve greatness.", "sentence_answer": "Yet, it was only with his 1936 feature \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d that, by some accounts, Mr. Mizoguchi felt he had finally found his artistic footing."} +{"question": "Who is given an elaborate dressing table and mirror?", "paragraph": "For this rashness, he is obliged to leave Tokyo and go to Osaka on his own, to work with a new troupe. A year later, Otoku follows. In one of the film\u2019s most moving scenes, she gives Kiku an elaborate dressing table and mirror, which barely fits into their tiny living quarters. And so Kiku\u2019s artistic redemption begins, even as the couple\u2019s material circumstances dwindle. While \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d and \u201cSisters of the Gion,\u201d the two Mizoguchi pictures of this period that have been most widely seen in the West, were relatively brisk features, \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d at nearly two and a half hours, shows the director working in an expansive mode, one that would flower even more fully with his postwar masterpieces such as \u201cThe Life of Oharu,\u201d \u201cUgetsu\u201d and \u201cSansho the Bailiff.\u201d", "answer": "Otoku", "sentence": "A year later, Otoku follows.", "paragraph_sentence": "For this rashness, he is obliged to leave Tokyo and go to Osaka on his own, to work with a new troupe. A year later, Otoku follows. In one of the film\u2019s most moving scenes, she gives Kiku an elaborate dressing table and mirror, which barely fits into their tiny living quarters. And so Kiku\u2019s artistic redemption begins, even as the couple\u2019s material circumstances dwindle. While \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d and \u201cSisters of the Gion,\u201d the two Mizoguchi pictures of this period that have been most widely seen in the West, were relatively brisk features, \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d at nearly two and a half hours, shows the director working in an expansive mode, one that would flower even more fully with his postwar masterpieces such as \u201cThe Life of Oharu,\u201d \u201cUgetsu\u201d and \u201cSansho the Bailiff.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "For this rashness, he is obliged to leave Tokyo and go to Osaka on his own, to work with a new troupe. A year later, Otoku follows. In one of the film\u2019s most moving scenes, she gives Kiku an elaborate dressing table and mirror, which barely fits into their tiny living quarters. And so Kiku\u2019s artistic redemption begins, even as the couple\u2019s material circumstances dwindle. While \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d and \u201cSisters of the Gion,\u201d the two Mizoguchi pictures of this period that have been most widely seen in the West, were relatively brisk features, \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d at nearly two and a half hours, shows the director working in an expansive mode, one that would flower even more fully with his postwar masterpieces such as \u201cThe Life of Oharu,\u201d \u201cUgetsu\u201d and \u201cSansho the Bailiff.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "A year later, Otoku follows."} +{"question": "Kiku is obliged to leave Tokyo for what city?", "paragraph": "For this rashness, he is obliged to leave Tokyo and go to Osaka on his own, to work with a new troupe. A year later, Otoku follows. In one of the film\u2019s most moving scenes, she gives Kiku an elaborate dressing table and mirror, which barely fits into their tiny living quarters. And so Kiku\u2019s artistic redemption begins, even as the couple\u2019s material circumstances dwindle. While \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d and \u201cSisters of the Gion,\u201d the two Mizoguchi pictures of this period that have been most widely seen in the West, were relatively brisk features, \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d at nearly two and a half hours, shows the director working in an expansive mode, one that would flower even more fully with his postwar masterpieces such as \u201cThe Life of Oharu,\u201d \u201cUgetsu\u201d and \u201cSansho the Bailiff.\u201d", "answer": "Osaka", "sentence": "For this rashness, he is obliged to leave Tokyo and go to Osaka on his own, to work with a new troupe.", "paragraph_sentence": " For this rashness, he is obliged to leave Tokyo and go to Osaka on his own, to work with a new troupe. A year later, Otoku follows. In one of the film\u2019s most moving scenes, she gives Kiku an elaborate dressing table and mirror, which barely fits into their tiny living quarters. And so Kiku\u2019s artistic redemption begins, even as the couple\u2019s material circumstances dwindle. While \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d and \u201cSisters of the Gion,\u201d the two Mizoguchi pictures of this period that have been most widely seen in the West, were relatively brisk features, \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d at nearly two and a half hours, shows the director working in an expansive mode, one that would flower even more fully with his postwar masterpieces such as \u201cThe Life of Oharu,\u201d \u201cUgetsu\u201d and \u201cSansho the Bailiff.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "For this rashness, he is obliged to leave Tokyo and go to Osaka on his own, to work with a new troupe. A year later, Otoku follows. In one of the film\u2019s most moving scenes, she gives Kiku an elaborate dressing table and mirror, which barely fits into their tiny living quarters. And so Kiku\u2019s artistic redemption begins, even as the couple\u2019s material circumstances dwindle. While \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d and \u201cSisters of the Gion,\u201d the two Mizoguchi pictures of this period that have been most widely seen in the West, were relatively brisk features, \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d at nearly two and a half hours, shows the director working in an expansive mode, one that would flower even more fully with his postwar masterpieces such as \u201cThe Life of Oharu,\u201d \u201cUgetsu\u201d and \u201cSansho the Bailiff.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "For this rashness, he is obliged to leave Tokyo and go to Osaka on his own, to work with a new troupe."} +{"question": "Name three of his postwar masterpieces?", "paragraph": "For this rashness, he is obliged to leave Tokyo and go to Osaka on his own, to work with a new troupe. A year later, Otoku follows. In one of the film\u2019s most moving scenes, she gives Kiku an elaborate dressing table and mirror, which barely fits into their tiny living quarters. And so Kiku\u2019s artistic redemption begins, even as the couple\u2019s material circumstances dwindle. While \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d and \u201cSisters of the Gion,\u201d the two Mizoguchi pictures of this period that have been most widely seen in the West, were relatively brisk features, \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d at nearly two and a half hours, shows the director working in an expansive mode, one that would flower even more fully with his postwar masterpieces such as \u201cThe Life of Oharu,\u201d \u201cUgetsu\u201d and \u201cSansho the Bailiff.\u201d", "answer": "\u201cThe Life of Oharu,\u201d \u201cUgetsu\u201d and \u201cSansho the Bailiff.\u201d", "sentence": "While \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d and \u201cSisters of the Gion,\u201d the two Mizoguchi pictures of this period that have been most widely seen in the West, were relatively brisk features, \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d at nearly two and a half hours, shows the director working in an expansive mode, one that would flower even more fully with his postwar masterpieces such as \u201cThe Life of Oharu,\u201d \u201cUgetsu\u201d and \u201cSansho the Bailiff.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "For this rashness, he is obliged to leave Tokyo and go to Osaka on his own, to work with a new troupe. A year later, Otoku follows. In one of the film\u2019s most moving scenes, she gives Kiku an elaborate dressing table and mirror, which barely fits into their tiny living quarters. And so Kiku\u2019s artistic redemption begins, even as the couple\u2019s material circumstances dwindle. While \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d and \u201cSisters of the Gion,\u201d the two Mizoguchi pictures of this period that have been most widely seen in the West, were relatively brisk features, \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d at nearly two and a half hours, shows the director working in an expansive mode, one that would flower even more fully with his postwar masterpieces such as \u201cThe Life of Oharu,\u201d \u201cUgetsu\u201d and \u201cSansho the Bailiff.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "For this rashness, he is obliged to leave Tokyo and go to Osaka on his own, to work with a new troupe. A year later, Otoku follows. In one of the film\u2019s most moving scenes, she gives Kiku an elaborate dressing table and mirror, which barely fits into their tiny living quarters. And so Kiku\u2019s artistic redemption begins, even as the couple\u2019s material circumstances dwindle. While \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d and \u201cSisters of the Gion,\u201d the two Mizoguchi pictures of this period that have been most widely seen in the West, were relatively brisk features, \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d at nearly two and a half hours, shows the director working in an expansive mode, one that would flower even more fully with his postwar masterpieces such as \u201cThe Life of Oharu,\u201d \u201cUgetsu\u201d and \u201cSansho the Bailiff.\u201d ", "sentence_answer": "While \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d and \u201cSisters of the Gion,\u201d the two Mizoguchi pictures of this period that have been most widely seen in the West, were relatively brisk features, \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d at nearly two and a half hours, shows the director working in an expansive mode, one that would flower even more fully with his postwar masterpieces such as \u201cThe Life of Oharu,\u201d \u201cUgetsu\u201d and \u201cSansho the Bailiff.\u201d "} +{"question": "Which two Mizoguchi film had been widely seen in the west?", "paragraph": "For this rashness, he is obliged to leave Tokyo and go to Osaka on his own, to work with a new troupe. A year later, Otoku follows. In one of the film\u2019s most moving scenes, she gives Kiku an elaborate dressing table and mirror, which barely fits into their tiny living quarters. And so Kiku\u2019s artistic redemption begins, even as the couple\u2019s material circumstances dwindle. While \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d and \u201cSisters of the Gion,\u201d the two Mizoguchi pictures of this period that have been most widely seen in the West, were relatively brisk features, \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d at nearly two and a half hours, shows the director working in an expansive mode, one that would flower even more fully with his postwar masterpieces such as \u201cThe Life of Oharu,\u201d \u201cUgetsu\u201d and \u201cSansho the Bailiff.\u201d", "answer": "\u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d and \u201cSisters of the Gion,\u201d", "sentence": "While \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d and \u201cSisters of the Gion,\u201d the two Mizoguchi pictures of this period that have been most widely seen in the West, were relatively brisk features, \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d at nearly two and a half hours, shows the director working in an expansive mode, one that would flower even more fully with his postwar masterpieces such as \u201cThe Life of Oharu,\u201d \u201cUgetsu\u201d and \u201cSansho the Bailiff.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "For this rashness, he is obliged to leave Tokyo and go to Osaka on his own, to work with a new troupe. A year later, Otoku follows. In one of the film\u2019s most moving scenes, she gives Kiku an elaborate dressing table and mirror, which barely fits into their tiny living quarters. And so Kiku\u2019s artistic redemption begins, even as the couple\u2019s material circumstances dwindle. While \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d and \u201cSisters of the Gion,\u201d the two Mizoguchi pictures of this period that have been most widely seen in the West, were relatively brisk features, \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d at nearly two and a half hours, shows the director working in an expansive mode, one that would flower even more fully with his postwar masterpieces such as \u201cThe Life of Oharu,\u201d \u201cUgetsu\u201d and \u201cSansho the Bailiff.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "For this rashness, he is obliged to leave Tokyo and go to Osaka on his own, to work with a new troupe. A year later, Otoku follows. In one of the film\u2019s most moving scenes, she gives Kiku an elaborate dressing table and mirror, which barely fits into their tiny living quarters. And so Kiku\u2019s artistic redemption begins, even as the couple\u2019s material circumstances dwindle. While \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d and \u201cSisters of the Gion,\u201d the two Mizoguchi pictures of this period that have been most widely seen in the West, were relatively brisk features, \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d at nearly two and a half hours, shows the director working in an expansive mode, one that would flower even more fully with his postwar masterpieces such as \u201cThe Life of Oharu,\u201d \u201cUgetsu\u201d and \u201cSansho the Bailiff.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "While \u201cOsaka Elegy\u201d and \u201cSisters of the Gion,\u201d the two Mizoguchi pictures of this period that have been most widely seen in the West, were relatively brisk features, \u201cChrysanthemum,\u201d at nearly two and a half hours, shows the director working in an expansive mode, one that would flower even more fully with his postwar masterpieces such as \u201cThe Life of Oharu,\u201d \u201cUgetsu\u201d and \u201cSansho the Bailiff.\u201d"} +{"question": "How long is the video?", "paragraph": "The video, 1 minute 3 seconds and set in Boca Raton, Fla., features a gender-bending character in a variety of poses: drinking Red Bull in a pink velour zip-up jacket on the beach, sitting on a sofa in a high-rise condo, doing dance moves while dressed in a floral midriff top. The soundtrack includes conversational snippets overheard by the artist at last year\u2019s Art Basel in Miami Beach, including \u201cShe\u2019s so talented, she\u2019s a real artist,\u201d and \u201cListen, if you are on the wait list, that means you are in the liminal zone between being no one and actually being someone.\u201d", "answer": "1 minute 3 seconds", "sentence": "The video, 1 minute 3 seconds and set in Boca Raton, Fla., features a gender-bending character in a variety of poses: drinking Red Bull in a pink velour zip-up jacket on the beach, sitting on a sofa in a high-rise condo, doing dance moves while dressed in a floral midriff top.", "paragraph_sentence": " The video, 1 minute 3 seconds and set in Boca Raton, Fla., features a gender-bending character in a variety of poses: drinking Red Bull in a pink velour zip-up jacket on the beach, sitting on a sofa in a high-rise condo, doing dance moves while dressed in a floral midriff top. The soundtrack includes conversational snippets overheard by the artist at last year\u2019s Art Basel in Miami Beach, including \u201cShe\u2019s so talented, she\u2019s a real artist,\u201d and \u201cListen, if you are on the wait list, that means you are in the liminal zone between being no one and actually being someone.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The video, 1 minute 3 seconds and set in Boca Raton, Fla., features a gender-bending character in a variety of poses: drinking Red Bull in a pink velour zip-up jacket on the beach, sitting on a sofa in a high-rise condo, doing dance moves while dressed in a floral midriff top. The soundtrack includes conversational snippets overheard by the artist at last year\u2019s Art Basel in Miami Beach, including \u201cShe\u2019s so talented, she\u2019s a real artist,\u201d and \u201cListen, if you are on the wait list, that means you are in the liminal zone between being no one and actually being someone.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The video, 1 minute 3 seconds and set in Boca Raton, Fla., features a gender-bending character in a variety of poses: drinking Red Bull in a pink velour zip-up jacket on the beach, sitting on a sofa in a high-rise condo, doing dance moves while dressed in a floral midriff top."} +{"question": "Where is the video set?", "paragraph": "The video, 1 minute 3 seconds and set in Boca Raton, Fla., features a gender-bending character in a variety of poses: drinking Red Bull in a pink velour zip-up jacket on the beach, sitting on a sofa in a high-rise condo, doing dance moves while dressed in a floral midriff top. The soundtrack includes conversational snippets overheard by the artist at last year\u2019s Art Basel in Miami Beach, including \u201cShe\u2019s so talented, she\u2019s a real artist,\u201d and \u201cListen, if you are on the wait list, that means you are in the liminal zone between being no one and actually being someone.\u201d", "answer": "Boca Raton, Fla", "sentence": "The video, 1 minute 3 seconds and set in Boca Raton, Fla ., features a gender-bending character in a variety of poses: drinking Red Bull in a pink velour zip-up jacket on the beach, sitting on a sofa in a high-rise condo, doing dance moves while dressed in a floral midriff top.", "paragraph_sentence": " The video, 1 minute 3 seconds and set in Boca Raton, Fla ., features a gender-bending character in a variety of poses: drinking Red Bull in a pink velour zip-up jacket on the beach, sitting on a sofa in a high-rise condo, doing dance moves while dressed in a floral midriff top. The soundtrack includes conversational snippets overheard by the artist at last year\u2019s Art Basel in Miami Beach, including \u201cShe\u2019s so talented, she\u2019s a real artist,\u201d and \u201cListen, if you are on the wait list, that means you are in the liminal zone between being no one and actually being someone.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The video, 1 minute 3 seconds and set in Boca Raton, Fla ., features a gender-bending character in a variety of poses: drinking Red Bull in a pink velour zip-up jacket on the beach, sitting on a sofa in a high-rise condo, doing dance moves while dressed in a floral midriff top. The soundtrack includes conversational snippets overheard by the artist at last year\u2019s Art Basel in Miami Beach, including \u201cShe\u2019s so talented, she\u2019s a real artist,\u201d and \u201cListen, if you are on the wait list, that means you are in the liminal zone between being no one and actually being someone.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The video, 1 minute 3 seconds and set in Boca Raton, Fla ., features a gender-bending character in a variety of poses: drinking Red Bull in a pink velour zip-up jacket on the beach, sitting on a sofa in a high-rise condo, doing dance moves while dressed in a floral midriff top."} +{"question": "What does the gender bending character drink in the video?", "paragraph": "The video, 1 minute 3 seconds and set in Boca Raton, Fla., features a gender-bending character in a variety of poses: drinking Red Bull in a pink velour zip-up jacket on the beach, sitting on a sofa in a high-rise condo, doing dance moves while dressed in a floral midriff top. The soundtrack includes conversational snippets overheard by the artist at last year\u2019s Art Basel in Miami Beach, including \u201cShe\u2019s so talented, she\u2019s a real artist,\u201d and \u201cListen, if you are on the wait list, that means you are in the liminal zone between being no one and actually being someone.\u201d", "answer": "Red Bull", "sentence": "The video, 1 minute 3 seconds and set in Boca Raton, Fla., features a gender-bending character in a variety of poses: drinking Red Bull in a pink velour zip-up jacket on the beach, sitting on a sofa in a high-rise condo, doing dance moves while dressed in a floral midriff top.", "paragraph_sentence": " The video, 1 minute 3 seconds and set in Boca Raton, Fla., features a gender-bending character in a variety of poses: drinking Red Bull in a pink velour zip-up jacket on the beach, sitting on a sofa in a high-rise condo, doing dance moves while dressed in a floral midriff top. The soundtrack includes conversational snippets overheard by the artist at last year\u2019s Art Basel in Miami Beach, including \u201cShe\u2019s so talented, she\u2019s a real artist,\u201d and \u201cListen, if you are on the wait list, that means you are in the liminal zone between being no one and actually being someone.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The video, 1 minute 3 seconds and set in Boca Raton, Fla., features a gender-bending character in a variety of poses: drinking Red Bull in a pink velour zip-up jacket on the beach, sitting on a sofa in a high-rise condo, doing dance moves while dressed in a floral midriff top. The soundtrack includes conversational snippets overheard by the artist at last year\u2019s Art Basel in Miami Beach, including \u201cShe\u2019s so talented, she\u2019s a real artist,\u201d and \u201cListen, if you are on the wait list, that means you are in the liminal zone between being no one and actually being someone.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The video, 1 minute 3 seconds and set in Boca Raton, Fla., features a gender-bending character in a variety of poses: drinking Red Bull in a pink velour zip-up jacket on the beach, sitting on a sofa in a high-rise condo, doing dance moves while dressed in a floral midriff top."} +{"question": "Where was last years Art Basel held?", "paragraph": "The video, 1 minute 3 seconds and set in Boca Raton, Fla., features a gender-bending character in a variety of poses: drinking Red Bull in a pink velour zip-up jacket on the beach, sitting on a sofa in a high-rise condo, doing dance moves while dressed in a floral midriff top. The soundtrack includes conversational snippets overheard by the artist at last year\u2019s Art Basel in Miami Beach, including \u201cShe\u2019s so talented, she\u2019s a real artist,\u201d and \u201cListen, if you are on the wait list, that means you are in the liminal zone between being no one and actually being someone.\u201d", "answer": "Miami Beach", "sentence": "Art Basel in Miami Beach , including \u201cShe\u2019s so talented, she\u2019s a real artist,\u201d and \u201cListen, if you are on the wait list, that means you are in the liminal zone between being no one and actually being someone.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "The video, 1 minute 3 seconds and set in Boca Raton, Fla., features a gender-bending character in a variety of poses: drinking Red Bull in a pink velour zip-up jacket on the beach, sitting on a sofa in a high-rise condo, doing dance moves while dressed in a floral midriff top. The soundtrack includes conversational snippets overheard by the artist at last year\u2019s Art Basel in Miami Beach , including \u201cShe\u2019s so talented, she\u2019s a real artist,\u201d and \u201cListen, if you are on the wait list, that means you are in the liminal zone between being no one and actually being someone.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "The video, 1 minute 3 seconds and set in Boca Raton, Fla., features a gender-bending character in a variety of poses: drinking Red Bull in a pink velour zip-up jacket on the beach, sitting on a sofa in a high-rise condo, doing dance moves while dressed in a floral midriff top. The soundtrack includes conversational snippets overheard by the artist at last year\u2019s Art Basel in Miami Beach , including \u201cShe\u2019s so talented, she\u2019s a real artist,\u201d and \u201cListen, if you are on the wait list, that means you are in the liminal zone between being no one and actually being someone.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Art Basel in Miami Beach , including \u201cShe\u2019s so talented, she\u2019s a real artist,\u201d and \u201cListen, if you are on the wait list, that means you are in the liminal zone between being no one and actually being someone.\u201d"} +{"question": "What year did Ms. Wise graduate art school in Montreal?", "paragraph": "\u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise, who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013. \u201cIt is a really interesting place to overhear things.\u201d And, apparently, to get on board with a new way to sell art. Miami is also where Ms. Wise first met David Gryn, a London-based curator who, along with the British collector and philanthropist Anita Zabludowicz, co-created Daata Editions. The website, which debuted during this year\u2019s Frieze Art Fair in New York, combines the growing online art sales scene with the mushrooming market value of new media art. Ms. Wise was one of 18 new-media artists invited to be part of the inaugural group to show on the website. The group includes Jon Rafman, Takeshi Murata, Hannah Perry, Ilit Azoulay and Stephen Vitiello. \u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello, a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d", "answer": "2013", "sentence": "\u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise, who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013 .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise, who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013 . \u201cIt is a really interesting place to overhear things.\u201d And, apparently, to get on board with a new way to sell art. Miami is also where Ms. Wise first met David Gryn, a London-based curator who, along with the British collector and philanthropist Anita Zabludowicz, co-created Daata Editions. The website, which debuted during this year\u2019s Frieze Art Fair in New York, combines the growing online art sales scene with the mushrooming market value of new media art. Ms. Wise was one of 18 new-media artists invited to be part of the inaugural group to show on the website. The group includes Jon Rafman, Takeshi Murata, Hannah Perry, Ilit Azoulay and Stephen Vitiello. \u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello, a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise, who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013 . \u201cIt is a really interesting place to overhear things.\u201d And, apparently, to get on board with a new way to sell art. Miami is also where Ms. Wise first met David Gryn, a London-based curator who, along with the British collector and philanthropist Anita Zabludowicz, co-created Daata Editions. The website, which debuted during this year\u2019s Frieze Art Fair in New York, combines the growing online art sales scene with the mushrooming market value of new media art. Ms. Wise was one of 18 new-media artists invited to be part of the inaugural group to show on the website. The group includes Jon Rafman, Takeshi Murata, Hannah Perry, Ilit Azoulay and Stephen Vitiello. \u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello, a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise, who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013 ."} +{"question": "What is the name of the philanthropist who co-created Daata Editions?", "paragraph": "\u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise, who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013. \u201cIt is a really interesting place to overhear things.\u201d And, apparently, to get on board with a new way to sell art. Miami is also where Ms. Wise first met David Gryn, a London-based curator who, along with the British collector and philanthropist Anita Zabludowicz, co-created Daata Editions. The website, which debuted during this year\u2019s Frieze Art Fair in New York, combines the growing online art sales scene with the mushrooming market value of new media art. Ms. Wise was one of 18 new-media artists invited to be part of the inaugural group to show on the website. The group includes Jon Rafman, Takeshi Murata, Hannah Perry, Ilit Azoulay and Stephen Vitiello. \u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello, a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d", "answer": "Anita Zabludowicz", "sentence": "who, along with the British collector and philanthropist Anita Zabludowicz , co-created Daata Editions.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise, who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013. \u201cIt is a really interesting place to overhear things.\u201d And, apparently, to get on board with a new way to sell art. Miami is also where Ms. Wise first met David Gryn, a London-based curator who, along with the British collector and philanthropist Anita Zabludowicz , co-created Daata Editions. The website, which debuted during this year\u2019s Frieze Art Fair in New York, combines the growing online art sales scene with the mushrooming market value of new media art. Ms. Wise was one of 18 new-media artists invited to be part of the inaugural group to show on the website. The group includes Jon Rafman, Takeshi Murata, Hannah Perry, Ilit Azoulay and Stephen Vitiello. \u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello, a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise, who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013. \u201cIt is a really interesting place to overhear things.\u201d And, apparently, to get on board with a new way to sell art. Miami is also where Ms. Wise first met David Gryn, a London-based curator who, along with the British collector and philanthropist Anita Zabludowicz , co-created Daata Editions. The website, which debuted during this year\u2019s Frieze Art Fair in New York, combines the growing online art sales scene with the mushrooming market value of new media art. Ms. Wise was one of 18 new-media artists invited to be part of the inaugural group to show on the website. The group includes Jon Rafman, Takeshi Murata, Hannah Perry, Ilit Azoulay and Stephen Vitiello. \u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello, a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "who, along with the British collector and philanthropist Anita Zabludowicz , co-created Daata Editions."} +{"question": "Where was the new website debuted?", "paragraph": "\u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise, who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013. \u201cIt is a really interesting place to overhear things.\u201d And, apparently, to get on board with a new way to sell art. Miami is also where Ms. Wise first met David Gryn, a London-based curator who, along with the British collector and philanthropist Anita Zabludowicz, co-created Daata Editions. The website, which debuted during this year\u2019s Frieze Art Fair in New York, combines the growing online art sales scene with the mushrooming market value of new media art. Ms. Wise was one of 18 new-media artists invited to be part of the inaugural group to show on the website. The group includes Jon Rafman, Takeshi Murata, Hannah Perry, Ilit Azoulay and Stephen Vitiello. \u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello, a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d", "answer": "Frieze Art Fair in New York", "sentence": "The website, which debuted during this year\u2019s Frieze Art Fair in New York , combines the growing online art sales scene with the mushrooming market value of new media art.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise, who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013. \u201cIt is a really interesting place to overhear things.\u201d And, apparently, to get on board with a new way to sell art. Miami is also where Ms. Wise first met David Gryn, a London-based curator who, along with the British collector and philanthropist Anita Zabludowicz, co-created Daata Editions. The website, which debuted during this year\u2019s Frieze Art Fair in New York , combines the growing online art sales scene with the mushrooming market value of new media art. Ms. Wise was one of 18 new-media artists invited to be part of the inaugural group to show on the website. The group includes Jon Rafman, Takeshi Murata, Hannah Perry, Ilit Azoulay and Stephen Vitiello. \u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello, a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise, who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013. \u201cIt is a really interesting place to overhear things.\u201d And, apparently, to get on board with a new way to sell art. Miami is also where Ms. Wise first met David Gryn, a London-based curator who, along with the British collector and philanthropist Anita Zabludowicz, co-created Daata Editions. The website, which debuted during this year\u2019s Frieze Art Fair in New York , combines the growing online art sales scene with the mushrooming market value of new media art. Ms. Wise was one of 18 new-media artists invited to be part of the inaugural group to show on the website. The group includes Jon Rafman, Takeshi Murata, Hannah Perry, Ilit Azoulay and Stephen Vitiello. \u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello, a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The website, which debuted during this year\u2019s Frieze Art Fair in New York , combines the growing online art sales scene with the mushrooming market value of new media art."} +{"question": "Who was one of the 18 new-media artists to be invited to part of the inaugural group?", "paragraph": "\u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise, who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013. \u201cIt is a really interesting place to overhear things.\u201d And, apparently, to get on board with a new way to sell art. Miami is also where Ms. Wise first met David Gryn, a London-based curator who, along with the British collector and philanthropist Anita Zabludowicz, co-created Daata Editions. The website, which debuted during this year\u2019s Frieze Art Fair in New York, combines the growing online art sales scene with the mushrooming market value of new media art. Ms. Wise was one of 18 new-media artists invited to be part of the inaugural group to show on the website. The group includes Jon Rafman, Takeshi Murata, Hannah Perry, Ilit Azoulay and Stephen Vitiello. \u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello, a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d", "answer": "Ms. Wise", "sentence": "\u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise , who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise , who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013. \u201cIt is a really interesting place to overhear things.\u201d And, apparently, to get on board with a new way to sell art. Miami is also where Ms. Wise first met David Gryn, a London-based curator who, along with the British collector and philanthropist Anita Zabludowicz, co-created Daata Editions. The website, which debuted during this year\u2019s Frieze Art Fair in New York, combines the growing online art sales scene with the mushrooming market value of new media art. Ms. Wise was one of 18 new-media artists invited to be part of the inaugural group to show on the website. The group includes Jon Rafman, Takeshi Murata, Hannah Perry, Ilit Azoulay and Stephen Vitiello. \u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello, a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise , who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013. \u201cIt is a really interesting place to overhear things.\u201d And, apparently, to get on board with a new way to sell art. Miami is also where Ms. Wise first met David Gryn, a London-based curator who, along with the British collector and philanthropist Anita Zabludowicz, co-created Daata Editions. The website, which debuted during this year\u2019s Frieze Art Fair in New York, combines the growing online art sales scene with the mushrooming market value of new media art. Ms. Wise was one of 18 new-media artists invited to be part of the inaugural group to show on the website. The group includes Jon Rafman, Takeshi Murata, Hannah Perry, Ilit Azoulay and Stephen Vitiello. \u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello, a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise , who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013."} +{"question": "Who created the sound work named \"Stars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\"", "paragraph": "\u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise, who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013. \u201cIt is a really interesting place to overhear things.\u201d And, apparently, to get on board with a new way to sell art. Miami is also where Ms. Wise first met David Gryn, a London-based curator who, along with the British collector and philanthropist Anita Zabludowicz, co-created Daata Editions. The website, which debuted during this year\u2019s Frieze Art Fair in New York, combines the growing online art sales scene with the mushrooming market value of new media art. Ms. Wise was one of 18 new-media artists invited to be part of the inaugural group to show on the website. The group includes Jon Rafman, Takeshi Murata, Hannah Perry, Ilit Azoulay and Stephen Vitiello. \u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello, a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Vitiello", "sentence": "\u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello , a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise, who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013. \u201cIt is a really interesting place to overhear things.\u201d And, apparently, to get on board with a new way to sell art. Miami is also where Ms. Wise first met David Gryn, a London-based curator who, along with the British collector and philanthropist Anita Zabludowicz, co-created Daata Editions. The website, which debuted during this year\u2019s Frieze Art Fair in New York, combines the growing online art sales scene with the mushrooming market value of new media art. Ms. Wise was one of 18 new-media artists invited to be part of the inaugural group to show on the website. The group includes Jon Rafman, Takeshi Murata, Hannah Perry, Ilit Azoulay and Stephen Vitiello. \u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello , a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cMiami is a place of excess, of vacation and gluttony, but also the art market, with lots of consumerism going on,\u201d said Ms. Wise, who graduated from art school in Montreal in 2013. \u201cIt is a really interesting place to overhear things.\u201d And, apparently, to get on board with a new way to sell art. Miami is also where Ms. Wise first met David Gryn, a London-based curator who, along with the British collector and philanthropist Anita Zabludowicz, co-created Daata Editions. The website, which debuted during this year\u2019s Frieze Art Fair in New York, combines the growing online art sales scene with the mushrooming market value of new media art. Ms. Wise was one of 18 new-media artists invited to be part of the inaugural group to show on the website. The group includes Jon Rafman, Takeshi Murata, Hannah Perry, Ilit Azoulay and Stephen Vitiello. \u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello , a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI have learned to say no to a lot in the art world, as you sense \u2018I do not trust this person,\u201d\u2019 said Mr. Vitiello , a Virginia-based sound and visual artist who created sound works for Daata with names like \u201cStars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand.\u201d"} +{"question": "How many video,sound and digital artists will be commissioned?", "paragraph": "\u201cBut you try and say yes to those that instinctively feel interesting, and I thought, \u2018Why not give this a shot?\u201d\u2019 The idea behind Daata is simple. Once a year, 18 video, sound and digital artists will be commissioned to do six pieces of three minutes or less, 15 editions of each piece. The works are available to be purchased and downloaded from the site. Daata has a sliding price scale. Sound, web and digital works start at $100 and increase by edition to a top price of $2,800; for video, the starting price is $200, increasing by increments to a top price of $5,600. The price difference, Mr. Gryn said, is linked to the perceived higher market value of video. Daata keeps the revenue and pays each artist a 15 percent royalty on each sale.", "answer": "18", "sentence": "Once a year, 18 video, sound and digital artists will be commissioned to do six pieces of three minutes or less, 15 editions of each piece.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cBut you try and say yes to those that instinctively feel interesting, and I thought, \u2018Why not give this a shot?\u201d\u2019 The idea behind Daata is simple. Once a year, 18 video, sound and digital artists will be commissioned to do six pieces of three minutes or less, 15 editions of each piece. The works are available to be purchased and downloaded from the site. Daata has a sliding price scale. Sound, web and digital works start at $100 and increase by edition to a top price of $2,800; for video, the starting price is $200, increasing by increments to a top price of $5,600. The price difference, Mr. Gryn said, is linked to the perceived higher market value of video. Daata keeps the revenue and pays each artist a 15 percent royalty on each sale.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cBut you try and say yes to those that instinctively feel interesting, and I thought, \u2018Why not give this a shot?\u201d\u2019 The idea behind Daata is simple. Once a year, 18 video, sound and digital artists will be commissioned to do six pieces of three minutes or less, 15 editions of each piece. The works are available to be purchased and downloaded from the site. Daata has a sliding price scale. Sound, web and digital works start at $100 and increase by edition to a top price of $2,800; for video, the starting price is $200, increasing by increments to a top price of $5,600. The price difference, Mr. Gryn said, is linked to the perceived higher market value of video. Daata keeps the revenue and pays each artist a 15 percent royalty on each sale.", "sentence_answer": "Once a year, 18 video, sound and digital artists will be commissioned to do six pieces of three minutes or less, 15 editions of each piece."} +{"question": "How much do sound,web and digital works start at in price?", "paragraph": "\u201cBut you try and say yes to those that instinctively feel interesting, and I thought, \u2018Why not give this a shot?\u201d\u2019 The idea behind Daata is simple. Once a year, 18 video, sound and digital artists will be commissioned to do six pieces of three minutes or less, 15 editions of each piece. The works are available to be purchased and downloaded from the site. Daata has a sliding price scale. Sound, web and digital works start at $100 and increase by edition to a top price of $2,800; for video, the starting price is $200, increasing by increments to a top price of $5,600. The price difference, Mr. Gryn said, is linked to the perceived higher market value of video. Daata keeps the revenue and pays each artist a 15 percent royalty on each sale.", "answer": "$100", "sentence": "Sound, web and digital works start at $100 and increase by edition to a top price of $2,800; for video, the starting price is $200, increasing by increments to a top price of $5,600.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cBut you try and say yes to those that instinctively feel interesting, and I thought, \u2018Why not give this a shot?\u201d\u2019 The idea behind Daata is simple. Once a year, 18 video, sound and digital artists will be commissioned to do six pieces of three minutes or less, 15 editions of each piece. The works are available to be purchased and downloaded from the site. Daata has a sliding price scale. Sound, web and digital works start at $100 and increase by edition to a top price of $2,800; for video, the starting price is $200, increasing by increments to a top price of $5,600. The price difference, Mr. Gryn said, is linked to the perceived higher market value of video. Daata keeps the revenue and pays each artist a 15 percent royalty on each sale.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cBut you try and say yes to those that instinctively feel interesting, and I thought, \u2018Why not give this a shot?\u201d\u2019 The idea behind Daata is simple. Once a year, 18 video, sound and digital artists will be commissioned to do six pieces of three minutes or less, 15 editions of each piece. The works are available to be purchased and downloaded from the site. Daata has a sliding price scale. Sound, web and digital works start at $100 and increase by edition to a top price of $2,800; for video, the starting price is $200, increasing by increments to a top price of $5,600. The price difference, Mr. Gryn said, is linked to the perceived higher market value of video. Daata keeps the revenue and pays each artist a 15 percent royalty on each sale.", "sentence_answer": "Sound, web and digital works start at $100 and increase by edition to a top price of $2,800; for video, the starting price is $200, increasing by increments to a top price of $5,600."} +{"question": "How much royalty does Daata pay the artiests on each sale?", "paragraph": "\u201cBut you try and say yes to those that instinctively feel interesting, and I thought, \u2018Why not give this a shot?\u201d\u2019 The idea behind Daata is simple. Once a year, 18 video, sound and digital artists will be commissioned to do six pieces of three minutes or less, 15 editions of each piece. The works are available to be purchased and downloaded from the site. Daata has a sliding price scale. Sound, web and digital works start at $100 and increase by edition to a top price of $2,800; for video, the starting price is $200, increasing by increments to a top price of $5,600. The price difference, Mr. Gryn said, is linked to the perceived higher market value of video. Daata keeps the revenue and pays each artist a 15 percent royalty on each sale.", "answer": "15 percent", "sentence": "a 15 percent royalty on each sale.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cBut you try and say yes to those that instinctively feel interesting, and I thought, \u2018Why not give this a shot?\u201d\u2019 The idea behind Daata is simple. Once a year, 18 video, sound and digital artists will be commissioned to do six pieces of three minutes or less, 15 editions of each piece. The works are available to be purchased and downloaded from the site. Daata has a sliding price scale. Sound, web and digital works start at $100 and increase by edition to a top price of $2,800; for video, the starting price is $200, increasing by increments to a top price of $5,600. The price difference, Mr. Gryn said, is linked to the perceived higher market value of video. Daata keeps the revenue and pays each artist a 15 percent royalty on each sale. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cBut you try and say yes to those that instinctively feel interesting, and I thought, \u2018Why not give this a shot?\u201d\u2019 The idea behind Daata is simple. Once a year, 18 video, sound and digital artists will be commissioned to do six pieces of three minutes or less, 15 editions of each piece. The works are available to be purchased and downloaded from the site. Daata has a sliding price scale. Sound, web and digital works start at $100 and increase by edition to a top price of $2,800; for video, the starting price is $200, increasing by increments to a top price of $5,600. The price difference, Mr. Gryn said, is linked to the perceived higher market value of video. Daata keeps the revenue and pays each artist a 15 percent royalty on each sale.", "sentence_answer": "a 15 percent royalty on each sale."} +{"question": "What is the top price for Video works go for?", "paragraph": "\u201cBut you try and say yes to those that instinctively feel interesting, and I thought, \u2018Why not give this a shot?\u201d\u2019 The idea behind Daata is simple. Once a year, 18 video, sound and digital artists will be commissioned to do six pieces of three minutes or less, 15 editions of each piece. The works are available to be purchased and downloaded from the site. Daata has a sliding price scale. Sound, web and digital works start at $100 and increase by edition to a top price of $2,800; for video, the starting price is $200, increasing by increments to a top price of $5,600. The price difference, Mr. Gryn said, is linked to the perceived higher market value of video. Daata keeps the revenue and pays each artist a 15 percent royalty on each sale.", "answer": "$5,600", "sentence": "Sound, web and digital works start at $100 and increase by edition to a top price of $2,800; for video, the starting price is $200, increasing by increments to a top price of $5,600 .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cBut you try and say yes to those that instinctively feel interesting, and I thought, \u2018Why not give this a shot?\u201d\u2019 The idea behind Daata is simple. Once a year, 18 video, sound and digital artists will be commissioned to do six pieces of three minutes or less, 15 editions of each piece. The works are available to be purchased and downloaded from the site. Daata has a sliding price scale. Sound, web and digital works start at $100 and increase by edition to a top price of $2,800; for video, the starting price is $200, increasing by increments to a top price of $5,600 . The price difference, Mr. Gryn said, is linked to the perceived higher market value of video. Daata keeps the revenue and pays each artist a 15 percent royalty on each sale.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cBut you try and say yes to those that instinctively feel interesting, and I thought, \u2018Why not give this a shot?\u201d\u2019 The idea behind Daata is simple. Once a year, 18 video, sound and digital artists will be commissioned to do six pieces of three minutes or less, 15 editions of each piece. The works are available to be purchased and downloaded from the site. Daata has a sliding price scale. Sound, web and digital works start at $100 and increase by edition to a top price of $2,800; for video, the starting price is $200, increasing by increments to a top price of $5,600 . The price difference, Mr. Gryn said, is linked to the perceived higher market value of video. Daata keeps the revenue and pays each artist a 15 percent royalty on each sale.", "sentence_answer": "Sound, web and digital works start at $100 and increase by edition to a top price of $2,800; for video, the starting price is $200, increasing by increments to a top price of $5,600 ."} +{"question": "How many editions of each piece need to be completed?", "paragraph": "\u201cBut you try and say yes to those that instinctively feel interesting, and I thought, \u2018Why not give this a shot?\u201d\u2019 The idea behind Daata is simple. Once a year, 18 video, sound and digital artists will be commissioned to do six pieces of three minutes or less, 15 editions of each piece. The works are available to be purchased and downloaded from the site. Daata has a sliding price scale. Sound, web and digital works start at $100 and increase by edition to a top price of $2,800; for video, the starting price is $200, increasing by increments to a top price of $5,600. The price difference, Mr. Gryn said, is linked to the perceived higher market value of video. Daata keeps the revenue and pays each artist a 15 percent royalty on each sale.", "answer": "15", "sentence": "Once a year, 18 video, sound and digital artists will be commissioned to do six pieces of three minutes or less, 15 editions of each piece.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cBut you try and say yes to those that instinctively feel interesting, and I thought, \u2018Why not give this a shot?\u201d\u2019 The idea behind Daata is simple. Once a year, 18 video, sound and digital artists will be commissioned to do six pieces of three minutes or less, 15 editions of each piece. The works are available to be purchased and downloaded from the site. Daata has a sliding price scale. Sound, web and digital works start at $100 and increase by edition to a top price of $2,800; for video, the starting price is $200, increasing by increments to a top price of $5,600. The price difference, Mr. Gryn said, is linked to the perceived higher market value of video. Daata keeps the revenue and pays each artist a 15 percent royalty on each sale.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cBut you try and say yes to those that instinctively feel interesting, and I thought, \u2018Why not give this a shot?\u201d\u2019 The idea behind Daata is simple. Once a year, 18 video, sound and digital artists will be commissioned to do six pieces of three minutes or less, 15 editions of each piece. The works are available to be purchased and downloaded from the site. Daata has a sliding price scale. Sound, web and digital works start at $100 and increase by edition to a top price of $2,800; for video, the starting price is $200, increasing by increments to a top price of $5,600. The price difference, Mr. Gryn said, is linked to the perceived higher market value of video. Daata keeps the revenue and pays each artist a 15 percent royalty on each sale.", "sentence_answer": "Once a year, 18 video, sound and digital artists will be commissioned to do six pieces of three minutes or less, 15 editions of each piece."} +{"question": "Who is the director of Salon 94?", "paragraph": "The perception that video or sound art is difficult to grasp is something that Mr. Gryn hopes will change with Daata. \u201cWe are not a gallery \u2014 we are not art advisers,\u201d he said. \u201cWhat we are is a commissioning platform that works with artists who work in those mediums and who promote their art form and nurture awareness. My idea is that you make a self-sustaining business that commissions the next round of artists\u2019 works.\u201d By the beginning of September, all the inaugural artists had sold several editions of their works, and there were over 500 downloads of a free Jon Rafman video. By Mr. Gryn\u2019s standards, \u201cthat is fantastic,\u201d he wrote in an email, because it means the work is being seen and bought. Jessica Witkin, the director of the New York gallery Salon 94, which specializes in new media, drew a parallel with how collectors eventually warmed to photographic art, accepting the idea that more than one edition could be available.", "answer": "Jessica Witkin", "sentence": "Jessica Witkin , the director of the New York gallery Salon 94, which specializes in new media, drew a parallel with how collectors eventually warmed to photographic art, accepting the idea that more than one edition could be available.", "paragraph_sentence": "The perception that video or sound art is difficult to grasp is something that Mr. Gryn hopes will change with Daata. \u201cWe are not a gallery \u2014 we are not art advisers,\u201d he said. \u201cWhat we are is a commissioning platform that works with artists who work in those mediums and who promote their art form and nurture awareness. My idea is that you make a self-sustaining business that commissions the next round of artists\u2019 works.\u201d By the beginning of September, all the inaugural artists had sold several editions of their works, and there were over 500 downloads of a free Jon Rafman video. By Mr. Gryn\u2019s standards, \u201cthat is fantastic,\u201d he wrote in an email, because it means the work is being seen and bought. Jessica Witkin , the director of the New York gallery Salon 94, which specializes in new media, drew a parallel with how collectors eventually warmed to photographic art, accepting the idea that more than one edition could be available. ", "paragraph_answer": "The perception that video or sound art is difficult to grasp is something that Mr. Gryn hopes will change with Daata. \u201cWe are not a gallery \u2014 we are not art advisers,\u201d he said. \u201cWhat we are is a commissioning platform that works with artists who work in those mediums and who promote their art form and nurture awareness. My idea is that you make a self-sustaining business that commissions the next round of artists\u2019 works.\u201d By the beginning of September, all the inaugural artists had sold several editions of their works, and there were over 500 downloads of a free Jon Rafman video. By Mr. Gryn\u2019s standards, \u201cthat is fantastic,\u201d he wrote in an email, because it means the work is being seen and bought. Jessica Witkin , the director of the New York gallery Salon 94, which specializes in new media, drew a parallel with how collectors eventually warmed to photographic art, accepting the idea that more than one edition could be available.", "sentence_answer": " Jessica Witkin , the director of the New York gallery Salon 94, which specializes in new media, drew a parallel with how collectors eventually warmed to photographic art, accepting the idea that more than one edition could be available."} +{"question": "How many downloads of the free Jon Rafman videos were there?", "paragraph": "The perception that video or sound art is difficult to grasp is something that Mr. Gryn hopes will change with Daata. \u201cWe are not a gallery \u2014 we are not art advisers,\u201d he said. \u201cWhat we are is a commissioning platform that works with artists who work in those mediums and who promote their art form and nurture awareness. My idea is that you make a self-sustaining business that commissions the next round of artists\u2019 works.\u201d By the beginning of September, all the inaugural artists had sold several editions of their works, and there were over 500 downloads of a free Jon Rafman video. By Mr. Gryn\u2019s standards, \u201cthat is fantastic,\u201d he wrote in an email, because it means the work is being seen and bought. Jessica Witkin, the director of the New York gallery Salon 94, which specializes in new media, drew a parallel with how collectors eventually warmed to photographic art, accepting the idea that more than one edition could be available.", "answer": "500", "sentence": "By the beginning of September, all the inaugural artists had sold several editions of their works, and there were over 500 downloads of a free Jon Rafman video.", "paragraph_sentence": "The perception that video or sound art is difficult to grasp is something that Mr. Gryn hopes will change with Daata. \u201cWe are not a gallery \u2014 we are not art advisers,\u201d he said. \u201cWhat we are is a commissioning platform that works with artists who work in those mediums and who promote their art form and nurture awareness. My idea is that you make a self-sustaining business that commissions the next round of artists\u2019 works.\u201d By the beginning of September, all the inaugural artists had sold several editions of their works, and there were over 500 downloads of a free Jon Rafman video. By Mr. Gryn\u2019s standards, \u201cthat is fantastic,\u201d he wrote in an email, because it means the work is being seen and bought. Jessica Witkin, the director of the New York gallery Salon 94, which specializes in new media, drew a parallel with how collectors eventually warmed to photographic art, accepting the idea that more than one edition could be available.", "paragraph_answer": "The perception that video or sound art is difficult to grasp is something that Mr. Gryn hopes will change with Daata. \u201cWe are not a gallery \u2014 we are not art advisers,\u201d he said. \u201cWhat we are is a commissioning platform that works with artists who work in those mediums and who promote their art form and nurture awareness. My idea is that you make a self-sustaining business that commissions the next round of artists\u2019 works.\u201d By the beginning of September, all the inaugural artists had sold several editions of their works, and there were over 500 downloads of a free Jon Rafman video. By Mr. Gryn\u2019s standards, \u201cthat is fantastic,\u201d he wrote in an email, because it means the work is being seen and bought. Jessica Witkin, the director of the New York gallery Salon 94, which specializes in new media, drew a parallel with how collectors eventually warmed to photographic art, accepting the idea that more than one edition could be available.", "sentence_answer": "By the beginning of September, all the inaugural artists had sold several editions of their works, and there were over 500 downloads of a free Jon Rafman video."} +{"question": "By the beginning of what month did the inaugural artiest sell several of their works?", "paragraph": "The perception that video or sound art is difficult to grasp is something that Mr. Gryn hopes will change with Daata. \u201cWe are not a gallery \u2014 we are not art advisers,\u201d he said. \u201cWhat we are is a commissioning platform that works with artists who work in those mediums and who promote their art form and nurture awareness. My idea is that you make a self-sustaining business that commissions the next round of artists\u2019 works.\u201d By the beginning of September, all the inaugural artists had sold several editions of their works, and there were over 500 downloads of a free Jon Rafman video. By Mr. Gryn\u2019s standards, \u201cthat is fantastic,\u201d he wrote in an email, because it means the work is being seen and bought. Jessica Witkin, the director of the New York gallery Salon 94, which specializes in new media, drew a parallel with how collectors eventually warmed to photographic art, accepting the idea that more than one edition could be available.", "answer": "September", "sentence": "By the beginning of September , all the inaugural artists had sold several editions of their works, and there were over 500 downloads of a free Jon Rafman video.", "paragraph_sentence": "The perception that video or sound art is difficult to grasp is something that Mr. Gryn hopes will change with Daata. \u201cWe are not a gallery \u2014 we are not art advisers,\u201d he said. \u201cWhat we are is a commissioning platform that works with artists who work in those mediums and who promote their art form and nurture awareness. My idea is that you make a self-sustaining business that commissions the next round of artists\u2019 works.\u201d By the beginning of September , all the inaugural artists had sold several editions of their works, and there were over 500 downloads of a free Jon Rafman video. By Mr. Gryn\u2019s standards, \u201cthat is fantastic,\u201d he wrote in an email, because it means the work is being seen and bought. Jessica Witkin, the director of the New York gallery Salon 94, which specializes in new media, drew a parallel with how collectors eventually warmed to photographic art, accepting the idea that more than one edition could be available.", "paragraph_answer": "The perception that video or sound art is difficult to grasp is something that Mr. Gryn hopes will change with Daata. \u201cWe are not a gallery \u2014 we are not art advisers,\u201d he said. \u201cWhat we are is a commissioning platform that works with artists who work in those mediums and who promote their art form and nurture awareness. My idea is that you make a self-sustaining business that commissions the next round of artists\u2019 works.\u201d By the beginning of September , all the inaugural artists had sold several editions of their works, and there were over 500 downloads of a free Jon Rafman video. By Mr. Gryn\u2019s standards, \u201cthat is fantastic,\u201d he wrote in an email, because it means the work is being seen and bought. Jessica Witkin, the director of the New York gallery Salon 94, which specializes in new media, drew a parallel with how collectors eventually warmed to photographic art, accepting the idea that more than one edition could be available.", "sentence_answer": "By the beginning of September , all the inaugural artists had sold several editions of their works, and there were over 500 downloads of a free Jon Rafman video."} +{"question": "What does Mr. Gryn hope will change?", "paragraph": "The perception that video or sound art is difficult to grasp is something that Mr. Gryn hopes will change with Daata. \u201cWe are not a gallery \u2014 we are not art advisers,\u201d he said. \u201cWhat we are is a commissioning platform that works with artists who work in those mediums and who promote their art form and nurture awareness. My idea is that you make a self-sustaining business that commissions the next round of artists\u2019 works.\u201d By the beginning of September, all the inaugural artists had sold several editions of their works, and there were over 500 downloads of a free Jon Rafman video. By Mr. Gryn\u2019s standards, \u201cthat is fantastic,\u201d he wrote in an email, because it means the work is being seen and bought. Jessica Witkin, the director of the New York gallery Salon 94, which specializes in new media, drew a parallel with how collectors eventually warmed to photographic art, accepting the idea that more than one edition could be available.", "answer": "The perception that video or sound art is difficult to grasp", "sentence": "The perception that video or sound art is difficult to grasp is something that Mr. Gryn hopes will change with Daata.", "paragraph_sentence": " The perception that video or sound art is difficult to grasp is something that Mr. Gryn hopes will change with Daata. \u201cWe are not a gallery \u2014 we are not art advisers,\u201d he said. \u201cWhat we are is a commissioning platform that works with artists who work in those mediums and who promote their art form and nurture awareness. My idea is that you make a self-sustaining business that commissions the next round of artists\u2019 works.\u201d By the beginning of September, all the inaugural artists had sold several editions of their works, and there were over 500 downloads of a free Jon Rafman video. By Mr. Gryn\u2019s standards, \u201cthat is fantastic,\u201d he wrote in an email, because it means the work is being seen and bought. Jessica Witkin, the director of the New York gallery Salon 94, which specializes in new media, drew a parallel with how collectors eventually warmed to photographic art, accepting the idea that more than one edition could be available.", "paragraph_answer": " The perception that video or sound art is difficult to grasp is something that Mr. Gryn hopes will change with Daata. \u201cWe are not a gallery \u2014 we are not art advisers,\u201d he said. \u201cWhat we are is a commissioning platform that works with artists who work in those mediums and who promote their art form and nurture awareness. My idea is that you make a self-sustaining business that commissions the next round of artists\u2019 works.\u201d By the beginning of September, all the inaugural artists had sold several editions of their works, and there were over 500 downloads of a free Jon Rafman video. By Mr. Gryn\u2019s standards, \u201cthat is fantastic,\u201d he wrote in an email, because it means the work is being seen and bought. Jessica Witkin, the director of the New York gallery Salon 94, which specializes in new media, drew a parallel with how collectors eventually warmed to photographic art, accepting the idea that more than one edition could be available.", "sentence_answer": " The perception that video or sound art is difficult to grasp is something that Mr. Gryn hopes will change with Daata."} +{"question": "About how many scenes did Mr. Rylance say there were per episode?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking. So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production.", "answer": "about 70 or 80 scenes", "sentence": "\u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking. So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking. So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them."} +{"question": "What did Mr. Rylance say was the difficult was with his character?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking. So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production.", "answer": "The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking", "sentence": "The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking . So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking . So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production.", "sentence_answer": " The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking ."} +{"question": "What company was Colin Callender the former president of?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking. So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production.", "answer": "HBO films", "sentence": "Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking. So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking. So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production.", "sentence_answer": "Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012."} +{"question": "What did Mr. Callander envisage once he read the book(Wolf Hall)?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking. So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production.", "answer": "a television production", "sentence": "Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking. So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production . ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s an extraordinary job for me,\u201d Mr. Rylance said after shooting multiple takes of a confrontation with an ailing Catherine of Aragon (Joanne Whalley). \u201cThere are about 70 or 80 scenes per episode, and I\u2019m in most of them. The difficulty is that you are playing a character who never reveals what he is thinking. So you can\u2019t compromise his expressionlessness, but you have to convey what might be going on for him.\u201d Although the series has arrived after the plays, Colin Callender, a former president of HBO films whose production company Playground produced the series (with Company Pictures, \u201cMasterpiece\u201d and BBC Two), began negotiations to secure the rights in 2012. Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production .", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Callender said that as soon as he read the books, he envisaged a television production ."} +{"question": "Who is Mr. Lewis best known for playing?", "paragraph": "\u201cHere comes this series, based on two Booker Prize novels with magnificent actors and a substantial investment of time and money,\u201d Mr. Kosminsky said. \u201cThe BBC is saying, this is the kind of thing only the BBC can do.\u201d After the series was broadcast in Britain, there was exhaustive media coverage discussing everything from Tudor economics to fashion, and engendering a predictable amount of historical debate. \u201cThere\u2019s an important distinction to make,\u201d said Mr. Lewis, best known for playing Nicholas Brody in the series \u201cHomeland.\u201d Sitting on the lawn in full big-shouldered costume, looking every inch the handsome, charismatic and still-trim monarch he plays in the series, he added: \u201cWe are not telling Tudor history; we are creating \u2018Wolf Hall\u2019 from novels, which are already a rereading of Tudor history.\u201d The apparently inexhaustible appetite for versions of Ms. Mantel\u2019s story is partly the result of Britain\u2019s perpetual fascination with the Tudor dynasty but is mostly testament to her vividly original reading of the period: Henry\u2019s desperation for a male heir, the break with the Roman Catholic Church, the beginnings of Protestantism, the dissolution of the monasteries and the eventual execution of Anne, the point at which the second book ends. (Ms. Mantel is writing a third installment, \u201cThe Mirror and the Light,\u201d which will chronicle the last four years of Cromwell\u2019s life.) All these events are mediated through the perspective and personality of Cromwell, usually depicted by historians as an unscrupulous and cruel power-monger, but here given a far more enigmatic profile as Ms. Mantel\u2019s narrative follows his rise from blacksmith\u2019s son to heights of power second only to the king. As Cromwell frees his master from his marriage to Catherine of Aragon so that he may marry Anne Boleyn, then orchestrates her downfall, he emerges as clever, witty and urbane, multilingual, inexhaustibly energetic and a master of the dog-eat-dog political chess game that is Henry\u2019s court.", "answer": "Nicholas Brody", "sentence": "\u201cThere\u2019s an important distinction to make,\u201d said Mr. Lewis, best known for playing Nicholas Brody in the series \u201cHomeland.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cHere comes this series, based on two Booker Prize novels with magnificent actors and a substantial investment of time and money,\u201d Mr. Kosminsky said. \u201cThe BBC is saying, this is the kind of thing only the BBC can do.\u201d After the series was broadcast in Britain, there was exhaustive media coverage discussing everything from Tudor economics to fashion, and engendering a predictable amount of historical debate. \u201cThere\u2019s an important distinction to make,\u201d said Mr. Lewis, best known for playing Nicholas Brody in the series \u201cHomeland.\u201d Sitting on the lawn in full big-shouldered costume, looking every inch the handsome, charismatic and still-trim monarch he plays in the series, he added: \u201cWe are not telling Tudor history; we are creating \u2018Wolf Hall\u2019 from novels, which are already a rereading of Tudor history.\u201d The apparently inexhaustible appetite for versions of Ms. Mantel\u2019s story is partly the result of Britain\u2019s perpetual fascination with the Tudor dynasty but is mostly testament to her vividly original reading of the period: Henry\u2019s desperation for a male heir, the break with the Roman Catholic Church, the beginnings of Protestantism, the dissolution of the monasteries and the eventual execution of Anne, the point at which the second book ends. (Ms. Mantel is writing a third installment, \u201cThe Mirror and the Light,\u201d which will chronicle the last four years of Cromwell\u2019s life.) All these events are mediated through the perspective and personality of Cromwell, usually depicted by historians as an unscrupulous and cruel power-monger, but here given a far more enigmatic profile as Ms. Mantel\u2019s narrative follows his rise from blacksmith\u2019s son to heights of power second only to the king. As Cromwell frees his master from his marriage to Catherine of Aragon so that he may marry Anne Boleyn, then orchestrates her downfall, he emerges as clever, witty and urbane, multilingual, inexhaustibly energetic and a master of the dog-eat-dog political chess game that is Henry\u2019s court.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cHere comes this series, based on two Booker Prize novels with magnificent actors and a substantial investment of time and money,\u201d Mr. Kosminsky said. \u201cThe BBC is saying, this is the kind of thing only the BBC can do.\u201d After the series was broadcast in Britain, there was exhaustive media coverage discussing everything from Tudor economics to fashion, and engendering a predictable amount of historical debate. \u201cThere\u2019s an important distinction to make,\u201d said Mr. Lewis, best known for playing Nicholas Brody in the series \u201cHomeland.\u201d Sitting on the lawn in full big-shouldered costume, looking every inch the handsome, charismatic and still-trim monarch he plays in the series, he added: \u201cWe are not telling Tudor history; we are creating \u2018Wolf Hall\u2019 from novels, which are already a rereading of Tudor history.\u201d The apparently inexhaustible appetite for versions of Ms. Mantel\u2019s story is partly the result of Britain\u2019s perpetual fascination with the Tudor dynasty but is mostly testament to her vividly original reading of the period: Henry\u2019s desperation for a male heir, the break with the Roman Catholic Church, the beginnings of Protestantism, the dissolution of the monasteries and the eventual execution of Anne, the point at which the second book ends. (Ms. Mantel is writing a third installment, \u201cThe Mirror and the Light,\u201d which will chronicle the last four years of Cromwell\u2019s life.) All these events are mediated through the perspective and personality of Cromwell, usually depicted by historians as an unscrupulous and cruel power-monger, but here given a far more enigmatic profile as Ms. Mantel\u2019s narrative follows his rise from blacksmith\u2019s son to heights of power second only to the king. As Cromwell frees his master from his marriage to Catherine of Aragon so that he may marry Anne Boleyn, then orchestrates her downfall, he emerges as clever, witty and urbane, multilingual, inexhaustibly energetic and a master of the dog-eat-dog political chess game that is Henry\u2019s court.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThere\u2019s an important distinction to make,\u201d said Mr. Lewis, best known for playing Nicholas Brody in the series \u201cHomeland.\u201d"} +{"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"} +{"question": "What is the inexhaustible appetite for versions of Wolf Hall a party a result of?", "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": "Britain\u2019s perpetual fascination with the Tudor dynasty", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"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."} +{"question": "How many Tony Awards has Mr. Rylance won?", "paragraph": "Mr. Rylance, who has won three Tony Awards, has done relatively little film or television work and isn\u2019t well-known to a broader audience. (That might change after \u201cWolf Hall\u201d and two current film projects with Steven Spielberg \u2014 \u201cThe BFG\u201d and \u201cBridge of Spies.\u201d) But Mr. Callender and his fellow producers weren\u2019t deterred. \u201cMost actors can do one or two things at the same time; great actors can do several things at the same time; Mark Rylance can do hundreds of things at the same time,\u201d he said. \u201cHe has one of those faces that can tell a thousand stories.\u201d So sure was Mr. Callender that Mr. Rylance was the right choice that he persuaded the BBC to wait a year while the actor performed in repertory productions of \u201cTwelfth Night\u201d and \u201cRichard III\u201d that played in the West End and on Broadway.", "answer": "three", "sentence": "Mr. Rylance, who has won three Tony Awards, has done relatively little film or television work and isn\u2019t well-known to a broader audience.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Rylance, who has won three Tony Awards, has done relatively little film or television work and isn\u2019t well-known to a broader audience. (That might change after \u201cWolf Hall\u201d and two current film projects with Steven Spielberg \u2014 \u201cThe BFG\u201d and \u201cBridge of Spies.\u201d) But Mr. Callender and his fellow producers weren\u2019t deterred. \u201cMost actors can do one or two things at the same time; great actors can do several things at the same time; Mark Rylance can do hundreds of things at the same time,\u201d he said. \u201cHe has one of those faces that can tell a thousand stories.\u201d So sure was Mr. Callender that Mr. Rylance was the right choice that he persuaded the BBC to wait a year while the actor performed in repertory productions of \u201cTwelfth Night\u201d and \u201cRichard III\u201d that played in the West End and on Broadway.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Rylance, who has won three Tony Awards, has done relatively little film or television work and isn\u2019t well-known to a broader audience. (That might change after \u201cWolf Hall\u201d and two current film projects with Steven Spielberg \u2014 \u201cThe BFG\u201d and \u201cBridge of Spies.\u201d) But Mr. Callender and his fellow producers weren\u2019t deterred. \u201cMost actors can do one or two things at the same time; great actors can do several things at the same time; Mark Rylance can do hundreds of things at the same time,\u201d he said. \u201cHe has one of those faces that can tell a thousand stories.\u201d So sure was Mr. Callender that Mr. Rylance was the right choice that he persuaded the BBC to wait a year while the actor performed in repertory productions of \u201cTwelfth Night\u201d and \u201cRichard III\u201d that played in the West End and on Broadway.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Rylance, who has won three Tony Awards, has done relatively little film or television work and isn\u2019t well-known to a broader audience."} +{"question": "How long did Mr. Callender persuade the BBC to wait for Mark Rylance?", "paragraph": "Mr. Rylance, who has won three Tony Awards, has done relatively little film or television work and isn\u2019t well-known to a broader audience. (That might change after \u201cWolf Hall\u201d and two current film projects with Steven Spielberg \u2014 \u201cThe BFG\u201d and \u201cBridge of Spies.\u201d) But Mr. Callender and his fellow producers weren\u2019t deterred. \u201cMost actors can do one or two things at the same time; great actors can do several things at the same time; Mark Rylance can do hundreds of things at the same time,\u201d he said. \u201cHe has one of those faces that can tell a thousand stories.\u201d So sure was Mr. Callender that Mr. Rylance was the right choice that he persuaded the BBC to wait a year while the actor performed in repertory productions of \u201cTwelfth Night\u201d and \u201cRichard III\u201d that played in the West End and on Broadway.", "answer": "a year", "sentence": "So sure was Mr. Callender that Mr. Rylance was the right choice that he persuaded the BBC to wait a year while the actor performed in repertory productions of \u201cTwelfth Night\u201d and \u201cRichard III\u201d that played in the West End and on Broadway.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Rylance, who has won three Tony Awards, has done relatively little film or television work and isn\u2019t well-known to a broader audience. (That might change after \u201cWolf Hall\u201d and two current film projects with Steven Spielberg \u2014 \u201cThe BFG\u201d and \u201cBridge of Spies.\u201d) But Mr. Callender and his fellow producers weren\u2019t deterred. \u201cMost actors can do one or two things at the same time; great actors can do several things at the same time; Mark Rylance can do hundreds of things at the same time,\u201d he said. \u201cHe has one of those faces that can tell a thousand stories.\u201d So sure was Mr. Callender that Mr. Rylance was the right choice that he persuaded the BBC to wait a year while the actor performed in repertory productions of \u201cTwelfth Night\u201d and \u201cRichard III\u201d that played in the West End and on Broadway. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Rylance, who has won three Tony Awards, has done relatively little film or television work and isn\u2019t well-known to a broader audience. (That might change after \u201cWolf Hall\u201d and two current film projects with Steven Spielberg \u2014 \u201cThe BFG\u201d and \u201cBridge of Spies.\u201d) But Mr. Callender and his fellow producers weren\u2019t deterred. \u201cMost actors can do one or two things at the same time; great actors can do several things at the same time; Mark Rylance can do hundreds of things at the same time,\u201d he said. \u201cHe has one of those faces that can tell a thousand stories.\u201d So sure was Mr. Callender that Mr. Rylance was the right choice that he persuaded the BBC to wait a year while the actor performed in repertory productions of \u201cTwelfth Night\u201d and \u201cRichard III\u201d that played in the West End and on Broadway.", "sentence_answer": "So sure was Mr. Callender that Mr. Rylance was the right choice that he persuaded the BBC to wait a year while the actor performed in repertory productions of \u201cTwelfth Night\u201d and \u201cRichard III\u201d that played in the West End and on Broadway."} +{"question": "Who does Mr. Rylance have two current film projects with?", "paragraph": "Mr. Rylance, who has won three Tony Awards, has done relatively little film or television work and isn\u2019t well-known to a broader audience. (That might change after \u201cWolf Hall\u201d and two current film projects with Steven Spielberg \u2014 \u201cThe BFG\u201d and \u201cBridge of Spies.\u201d) But Mr. Callender and his fellow producers weren\u2019t deterred. \u201cMost actors can do one or two things at the same time; great actors can do several things at the same time; Mark Rylance can do hundreds of things at the same time,\u201d he said. \u201cHe has one of those faces that can tell a thousand stories.\u201d So sure was Mr. Callender that Mr. Rylance was the right choice that he persuaded the BBC to wait a year while the actor performed in repertory productions of \u201cTwelfth Night\u201d and \u201cRichard III\u201d that played in the West End and on Broadway.", "answer": "Steven Spielberg", "sentence": "(That might change after \u201cWolf Hall\u201d and two current film projects with Steven Spielberg \u2014 \u201cThe BFG\u201d and \u201cBridge of Spies.\u201d)", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Rylance, who has won three Tony Awards, has done relatively little film or television work and isn\u2019t well-known to a broader audience. (That might change after \u201cWolf Hall\u201d and two current film projects with Steven Spielberg \u2014 \u201cThe BFG\u201d and \u201cBridge of Spies.\u201d) But Mr. Callender and his fellow producers weren\u2019t deterred. \u201cMost actors can do one or two things at the same time; great actors can do several things at the same time; Mark Rylance can do hundreds of things at the same time,\u201d he said. \u201cHe has one of those faces that can tell a thousand stories.\u201d So sure was Mr. Callender that Mr. Rylance was the right choice that he persuaded the BBC to wait a year while the actor performed in repertory productions of \u201cTwelfth Night\u201d and \u201cRichard III\u201d that played in the West End and on Broadway.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Rylance, who has won three Tony Awards, has done relatively little film or television work and isn\u2019t well-known to a broader audience. (That might change after \u201cWolf Hall\u201d and two current film projects with Steven Spielberg \u2014 \u201cThe BFG\u201d and \u201cBridge of Spies.\u201d) But Mr. Callender and his fellow producers weren\u2019t deterred. \u201cMost actors can do one or two things at the same time; great actors can do several things at the same time; Mark Rylance can do hundreds of things at the same time,\u201d he said. \u201cHe has one of those faces that can tell a thousand stories.\u201d So sure was Mr. Callender that Mr. Rylance was the right choice that he persuaded the BBC to wait a year while the actor performed in repertory productions of \u201cTwelfth Night\u201d and \u201cRichard III\u201d that played in the West End and on Broadway.", "sentence_answer": "(That might change after \u201cWolf Hall\u201d and two current film projects with Steven Spielberg \u2014 \u201cThe BFG\u201d and \u201cBridge of Spies.\u201d)"} +{"question": "What was Mark Rylance doing while the BBC waited for him to act in their show?", "paragraph": "Mr. Rylance, who has won three Tony Awards, has done relatively little film or television work and isn\u2019t well-known to a broader audience. (That might change after \u201cWolf Hall\u201d and two current film projects with Steven Spielberg \u2014 \u201cThe BFG\u201d and \u201cBridge of Spies.\u201d) But Mr. Callender and his fellow producers weren\u2019t deterred. \u201cMost actors can do one or two things at the same time; great actors can do several things at the same time; Mark Rylance can do hundreds of things at the same time,\u201d he said. \u201cHe has one of those faces that can tell a thousand stories.\u201d So sure was Mr. Callender that Mr. Rylance was the right choice that he persuaded the BBC to wait a year while the actor performed in repertory productions of \u201cTwelfth Night\u201d and \u201cRichard III\u201d that played in the West End and on Broadway.", "answer": "performed in repertory productions of \u201cTwelfth Night\u201d and \u201cRichard III\u201d that played in the West End and on Broadway.", "sentence": "So sure was Mr. Callender that Mr. Rylance was the right choice that he persuaded the BBC to wait a year while the actor performed in repertory productions of \u201cTwelfth Night\u201d and \u201cRichard III\u201d that played in the West End and on Broadway.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Rylance, who has won three Tony Awards, has done relatively little film or television work and isn\u2019t well-known to a broader audience. (That might change after \u201cWolf Hall\u201d and two current film projects with Steven Spielberg \u2014 \u201cThe BFG\u201d and \u201cBridge of Spies.\u201d) But Mr. Callender and his fellow producers weren\u2019t deterred. \u201cMost actors can do one or two things at the same time; great actors can do several things at the same time; Mark Rylance can do hundreds of things at the same time,\u201d he said. \u201cHe has one of those faces that can tell a thousand stories.\u201d So sure was Mr. Callender that Mr. Rylance was the right choice that he persuaded the BBC to wait a year while the actor performed in repertory productions of \u201cTwelfth Night\u201d and \u201cRichard III\u201d that played in the West End and on Broadway. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Rylance, who has won three Tony Awards, has done relatively little film or television work and isn\u2019t well-known to a broader audience. (That might change after \u201cWolf Hall\u201d and two current film projects with Steven Spielberg \u2014 \u201cThe BFG\u201d and \u201cBridge of Spies.\u201d) But Mr. Callender and his fellow producers weren\u2019t deterred. \u201cMost actors can do one or two things at the same time; great actors can do several things at the same time; Mark Rylance can do hundreds of things at the same time,\u201d he said. \u201cHe has one of those faces that can tell a thousand stories.\u201d So sure was Mr. Callender that Mr. Rylance was the right choice that he persuaded the BBC to wait a year while the actor performed in repertory productions of \u201cTwelfth Night\u201d and \u201cRichard III\u201d that played in the West End and on Broadway. ", "sentence_answer": "So sure was Mr. Callender that Mr. Rylance was the right choice that he persuaded the BBC to wait a year while the actor performed in repertory productions of \u201cTwelfth Night\u201d and \u201cRichard III\u201d that played in the West End and on Broadway. "} +{"question": "Who owns Dix Hills Animal Hospital?", "paragraph": "Dr. Rhein (left), 45, is a veterinarian in Huntington and the owner of Dix Hills Animal Hospital in Dix Hills, N.Y. She graduated and also received a veterinary medicine degree from Cornell. She is a daughter of Carol Heller Rhein and Dr. Harvey Rhein of Dix Hills. Her father retired as the owner of the veterinary clinic that she now owns. Her mother retired as an owner of A Special Place, a women\u2019s clothing boutique in Huntington. Ms. Stark-Rhein, 40, is a psychotherapist in the Smithtown, N.Y., clinic of New Horizon Counseling Center. She graduated from the University of Maryland and received a master\u2019s degree in social welfare from the State University of New York, Stony Brook.", "answer": "Dr. Rhein", "sentence": "Dr. Rhein (left), 45, is a veterinarian in Huntington and the owner of Dix Hills Animal Hospital in Dix Hills, N.Y.", "paragraph_sentence": " Dr. Rhein (left), 45, is a veterinarian in Huntington and the owner of Dix Hills Animal Hospital in Dix Hills, N.Y. She graduated and also received a veterinary medicine degree from Cornell. She is a daughter of Carol Heller Rhein and Dr. Harvey Rhein of Dix Hills. Her father retired as the owner of the veterinary clinic that she now owns. Her mother retired as an owner of A Special Place, a women\u2019s clothing boutique in Huntington. Ms. Stark-Rhein, 40, is a psychotherapist in the Smithtown, N.Y., clinic of New Horizon Counseling Center. She graduated from the University of Maryland and received a master\u2019s degree in social welfare from the State University of New York, Stony Brook.", "paragraph_answer": " Dr. Rhein (left), 45, is a veterinarian in Huntington and the owner of Dix Hills Animal Hospital in Dix Hills, N.Y. She graduated and also received a veterinary medicine degree from Cornell. She is a daughter of Carol Heller Rhein and Dr. Harvey Rhein of Dix Hills. Her father retired as the owner of the veterinary clinic that she now owns. Her mother retired as an owner of A Special Place, a women\u2019s clothing boutique in Huntington. Ms. Stark-Rhein, 40, is a psychotherapist in the Smithtown, N.Y., clinic of New Horizon Counseling Center. She graduated from the University of Maryland and received a master\u2019s degree in social welfare from the State University of New York, Stony Brook.", "sentence_answer": " Dr. Rhein (left), 45, is a veterinarian in Huntington and the owner of Dix Hills Animal Hospital in Dix Hills, N.Y."} +{"question": "What university did she attend?", "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": "Cornell", "sentence": "She graduated and also received a veterinary medicine degree from Cornell .", "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": "She graduated and also received a veterinary medicine degree from Cornell ."} +{"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 ."} +{"question": "What degree did she earn?", "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": "veterinary medicine", "sentence": "a veterinary medicine degree from Cornell.", "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": "a veterinary medicine degree from Cornell."} +{"question": "Who are her parents?", "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": "Carol Heller Rhein and Dr. Harvey Rhein", "sentence": "She is a daughter of Carol Heller Rhein and Dr. Harvey Rhein of Dix Hills.", "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": "She is a daughter of Carol Heller Rhein and Dr. Harvey Rhein of Dix Hills."} +{"question": "What is the name of the play that focuses on Liberia's civil war?", "paragraph": "An article last Sunday about three women involved with the play \u201cEclipsed,\u201d which focuses on Liberia\u2019s civil war, using information from a publicist, referred incorrectly to a big-budget project that one of the women, the director Liesl Tommy, is working on. It is a stage adaptation of a movie, not a movie. \u2022 An article last Sunday about an exhibition that Steve Martin is curating at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles misstated part of the name of a musical that he is working on with Edie Brickell. It is \u201cBright Star,\u201d not \u201cBright Eyes.\u201d The article also referred incorrectly to Mr. Martin\u2019s working relationship with the museum. In 2003, Mr. Martin wrote wall text for artworks in the exhibition \u201cWritings on the Wall\u201d; his tribute to the photographer Cindy Sherman in 2012 wasn\u2019t \u201chis only prior connection to the museum.\u201d And a picture credit with the article misidentified the source of the image \u201cMountains in Snow: Rocky Mountain Paintings VII.\u201d It was the Thomson Collection/Art Gallery of Ontario, not Michael Cullen. BOOK REVIEW", "answer": "Eclipsed", "sentence": "An article last Sunday about three women involved with the play \u201c Eclipsed ,\u201d which focuses on Liberia\u2019s civil war, using information from a publicist, referred incorrectly to a big-budget project that one of the women, the director Liesl Tommy, is working on.", "paragraph_sentence": " An article last Sunday about three women involved with the play \u201c Eclipsed ,\u201d which focuses on Liberia\u2019s civil war, using information from a publicist, referred incorrectly to a big-budget project that one of the women, the director Liesl Tommy, is working on. It is a stage adaptation of a movie, not a movie. \u2022 An article last Sunday about an exhibition that Steve Martin is curating at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles misstated part of the name of a musical that he is working on with Edie Brickell. It is \u201cBright Star,\u201d not \u201cBright Eyes.\u201d The article also referred incorrectly to Mr. Martin\u2019s working relationship with the museum. In 2003, Mr. Martin wrote wall text for artworks in the exhibition \u201cWritings on the Wall\u201d; his tribute to the photographer Cindy Sherman in 2012 wasn\u2019t \u201chis only prior connection to the museum.\u201d And a picture credit with the article misidentified the source of the image \u201cMountains in Snow: Rocky Mountain Paintings VII.\u201d It was the Thomson Collection/Art Gallery of Ontario, not Michael Cullen. BOOK REVIEW", "paragraph_answer": "An article last Sunday about three women involved with the play \u201c Eclipsed ,\u201d which focuses on Liberia\u2019s civil war, using information from a publicist, referred incorrectly to a big-budget project that one of the women, the director Liesl Tommy, is working on. It is a stage adaptation of a movie, not a movie. \u2022 An article last Sunday about an exhibition that Steve Martin is curating at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles misstated part of the name of a musical that he is working on with Edie Brickell. It is \u201cBright Star,\u201d not \u201cBright Eyes.\u201d The article also referred incorrectly to Mr. Martin\u2019s working relationship with the museum. In 2003, Mr. Martin wrote wall text for artworks in the exhibition \u201cWritings on the Wall\u201d; his tribute to the photographer Cindy Sherman in 2012 wasn\u2019t \u201chis only prior connection to the museum.\u201d And a picture credit with the article misidentified the source of the image \u201cMountains in Snow: Rocky Mountain Paintings VII.\u201d It was the Thomson Collection/Art Gallery of Ontario, not Michael Cullen. BOOK REVIEW", "sentence_answer": "An article last Sunday about three women involved with the play \u201c Eclipsed ,\u201d which focuses on Liberia\u2019s civil war, using information from a publicist, referred incorrectly to a big-budget project that one of the women, the director Liesl Tommy, is working on."} +{"question": "Who is the director of Eclipsed?", "paragraph": "An article last Sunday about three women involved with the play \u201cEclipsed,\u201d which focuses on Liberia\u2019s civil war, using information from a publicist, referred incorrectly to a big-budget project that one of the women, the director Liesl Tommy, is working on. It is a stage adaptation of a movie, not a movie. \u2022 An article last Sunday about an exhibition that Steve Martin is curating at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles misstated part of the name of a musical that he is working on with Edie Brickell. It is \u201cBright Star,\u201d not \u201cBright Eyes.\u201d The article also referred incorrectly to Mr. Martin\u2019s working relationship with the museum. In 2003, Mr. Martin wrote wall text for artworks in the exhibition \u201cWritings on the Wall\u201d; his tribute to the photographer Cindy Sherman in 2012 wasn\u2019t \u201chis only prior connection to the museum.\u201d And a picture credit with the article misidentified the source of the image \u201cMountains in Snow: Rocky Mountain Paintings VII.\u201d It was the Thomson Collection/Art Gallery of Ontario, not Michael Cullen. BOOK REVIEW", "answer": "Liesl Tommy", "sentence": "An article last Sunday about three women involved with the play \u201cEclipsed,\u201d which focuses on Liberia\u2019s civil war, using information from a publicist, referred incorrectly to a big-budget project that one of the women, the director Liesl Tommy , is working on.", "paragraph_sentence": " An article last Sunday about three women involved with the play \u201cEclipsed,\u201d which focuses on Liberia\u2019s civil war, using information from a publicist, referred incorrectly to a big-budget project that one of the women, the director Liesl Tommy , is working on. It is a stage adaptation of a movie, not a movie. \u2022 An article last Sunday about an exhibition that Steve Martin is curating at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles misstated part of the name of a musical that he is working on with Edie Brickell. It is \u201cBright Star,\u201d not \u201cBright Eyes.\u201d The article also referred incorrectly to Mr. Martin\u2019s working relationship with the museum. In 2003, Mr. Martin wrote wall text for artworks in the exhibition \u201cWritings on the Wall\u201d; his tribute to the photographer Cindy Sherman in 2012 wasn\u2019t \u201chis only prior connection to the museum.\u201d And a picture credit with the article misidentified the source of the image \u201cMountains in Snow: Rocky Mountain Paintings VII.\u201d It was the Thomson Collection/Art Gallery of Ontario, not Michael Cullen. BOOK REVIEW", "paragraph_answer": "An article last Sunday about three women involved with the play \u201cEclipsed,\u201d which focuses on Liberia\u2019s civil war, using information from a publicist, referred incorrectly to a big-budget project that one of the women, the director Liesl Tommy , is working on. It is a stage adaptation of a movie, not a movie. \u2022 An article last Sunday about an exhibition that Steve Martin is curating at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles misstated part of the name of a musical that he is working on with Edie Brickell. It is \u201cBright Star,\u201d not \u201cBright Eyes.\u201d The article also referred incorrectly to Mr. Martin\u2019s working relationship with the museum. In 2003, Mr. Martin wrote wall text for artworks in the exhibition \u201cWritings on the Wall\u201d; his tribute to the photographer Cindy Sherman in 2012 wasn\u2019t \u201chis only prior connection to the museum.\u201d And a picture credit with the article misidentified the source of the image \u201cMountains in Snow: Rocky Mountain Paintings VII.\u201d It was the Thomson Collection/Art Gallery of Ontario, not Michael Cullen. BOOK REVIEW", "sentence_answer": "An article last Sunday about three women involved with the play \u201cEclipsed,\u201d which focuses on Liberia\u2019s civil war, using information from a publicist, referred incorrectly to a big-budget project that one of the women, the director Liesl Tommy , is working on."} +{"question": "Where is Steve Martin curating an exhibition?", "paragraph": "An article last Sunday about three women involved with the play \u201cEclipsed,\u201d which focuses on Liberia\u2019s civil war, using information from a publicist, referred incorrectly to a big-budget project that one of the women, the director Liesl Tommy, is working on. It is a stage adaptation of a movie, not a movie. \u2022 An article last Sunday about an exhibition that Steve Martin is curating at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles misstated part of the name of a musical that he is working on with Edie Brickell. It is \u201cBright Star,\u201d not \u201cBright Eyes.\u201d The article also referred incorrectly to Mr. Martin\u2019s working relationship with the museum. In 2003, Mr. Martin wrote wall text for artworks in the exhibition \u201cWritings on the Wall\u201d; his tribute to the photographer Cindy Sherman in 2012 wasn\u2019t \u201chis only prior connection to the museum.\u201d And a picture credit with the article misidentified the source of the image \u201cMountains in Snow: Rocky Mountain Paintings VII.\u201d It was the Thomson Collection/Art Gallery of Ontario, not Michael Cullen. BOOK REVIEW", "answer": "Hammer Museum", "sentence": "An article last Sunday about an exhibition that Steve Martin is curating at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles misstated part of the name of a musical that he is working on with Edie Brickell.", "paragraph_sentence": "An article last Sunday about three women involved with the play \u201cEclipsed,\u201d which focuses on Liberia\u2019s civil war, using information from a publicist, referred incorrectly to a big-budget project that one of the women, the director Liesl Tommy, is working on. It is a stage adaptation of a movie, not a movie. \u2022 An article last Sunday about an exhibition that Steve Martin is curating at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles misstated part of the name of a musical that he is working on with Edie Brickell. It is \u201cBright Star,\u201d not \u201cBright Eyes.\u201d The article also referred incorrectly to Mr. Martin\u2019s working relationship with the museum. In 2003, Mr. Martin wrote wall text for artworks in the exhibition \u201cWritings on the Wall\u201d; his tribute to the photographer Cindy Sherman in 2012 wasn\u2019t \u201chis only prior connection to the museum.\u201d And a picture credit with the article misidentified the source of the image \u201cMountains in Snow: Rocky Mountain Paintings VII.\u201d It was the Thomson Collection/Art Gallery of Ontario, not Michael Cullen. BOOK REVIEW", "paragraph_answer": "An article last Sunday about three women involved with the play \u201cEclipsed,\u201d which focuses on Liberia\u2019s civil war, using information from a publicist, referred incorrectly to a big-budget project that one of the women, the director Liesl Tommy, is working on. It is a stage adaptation of a movie, not a movie. \u2022 An article last Sunday about an exhibition that Steve Martin is curating at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles misstated part of the name of a musical that he is working on with Edie Brickell. It is \u201cBright Star,\u201d not \u201cBright Eyes.\u201d The article also referred incorrectly to Mr. Martin\u2019s working relationship with the museum. In 2003, Mr. Martin wrote wall text for artworks in the exhibition \u201cWritings on the Wall\u201d; his tribute to the photographer Cindy Sherman in 2012 wasn\u2019t \u201chis only prior connection to the museum.\u201d And a picture credit with the article misidentified the source of the image \u201cMountains in Snow: Rocky Mountain Paintings VII.\u201d It was the Thomson Collection/Art Gallery of Ontario, not Michael Cullen. BOOK REVIEW", "sentence_answer": "An article last Sunday about an exhibition that Steve Martin is curating at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles misstated part of the name of a musical that he is working on with Edie Brickell."} +{"question": "What piece did Steve Martin contribute to?", "paragraph": "An article last Sunday about three women involved with the play \u201cEclipsed,\u201d which focuses on Liberia\u2019s civil war, using information from a publicist, referred incorrectly to a big-budget project that one of the women, the director Liesl Tommy, is working on. It is a stage adaptation of a movie, not a movie. \u2022 An article last Sunday about an exhibition that Steve Martin is curating at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles misstated part of the name of a musical that he is working on with Edie Brickell. It is \u201cBright Star,\u201d not \u201cBright Eyes.\u201d The article also referred incorrectly to Mr. Martin\u2019s working relationship with the museum. In 2003, Mr. Martin wrote wall text for artworks in the exhibition \u201cWritings on the Wall\u201d; his tribute to the photographer Cindy Sherman in 2012 wasn\u2019t \u201chis only prior connection to the museum.\u201d And a picture credit with the article misidentified the source of the image \u201cMountains in Snow: Rocky Mountain Paintings VII.\u201d It was the Thomson Collection/Art Gallery of Ontario, not Michael Cullen. BOOK REVIEW", "answer": "Writings on the Wall", "sentence": "In 2003, Mr. Martin wrote wall text for artworks in the exhibition \u201c Writings on the Wall \u201d; his tribute to the photographer Cindy Sherman in 2012 wasn\u2019t \u201chis only prior connection to the museum.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "An article last Sunday about three women involved with the play \u201cEclipsed,\u201d which focuses on Liberia\u2019s civil war, using information from a publicist, referred incorrectly to a big-budget project that one of the women, the director Liesl Tommy, is working on. It is a stage adaptation of a movie, not a movie. \u2022 An article last Sunday about an exhibition that Steve Martin is curating at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles misstated part of the name of a musical that he is working on with Edie Brickell. It is \u201cBright Star,\u201d not \u201cBright Eyes.\u201d The article also referred incorrectly to Mr. Martin\u2019s working relationship with the museum. In 2003, Mr. Martin wrote wall text for artworks in the exhibition \u201c Writings on the Wall \u201d; his tribute to the photographer Cindy Sherman in 2012 wasn\u2019t \u201chis only prior connection to the museum.\u201d And a picture credit with the article misidentified the source of the image \u201cMountains in Snow: Rocky Mountain Paintings VII.\u201d It was the Thomson Collection/Art Gallery of Ontario, not Michael Cullen. BOOK REVIEW", "paragraph_answer": "An article last Sunday about three women involved with the play \u201cEclipsed,\u201d which focuses on Liberia\u2019s civil war, using information from a publicist, referred incorrectly to a big-budget project that one of the women, the director Liesl Tommy, is working on. It is a stage adaptation of a movie, not a movie. \u2022 An article last Sunday about an exhibition that Steve Martin is curating at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles misstated part of the name of a musical that he is working on with Edie Brickell. It is \u201cBright Star,\u201d not \u201cBright Eyes.\u201d The article also referred incorrectly to Mr. Martin\u2019s working relationship with the museum. In 2003, Mr. Martin wrote wall text for artworks in the exhibition \u201c Writings on the Wall \u201d; his tribute to the photographer Cindy Sherman in 2012 wasn\u2019t \u201chis only prior connection to the museum.\u201d And a picture credit with the article misidentified the source of the image \u201cMountains in Snow: Rocky Mountain Paintings VII.\u201d It was the Thomson Collection/Art Gallery of Ontario, not Michael Cullen. BOOK REVIEW", "sentence_answer": "In 2003, Mr. Martin wrote wall text for artworks in the exhibition \u201c Writings on the Wall \u201d; his tribute to the photographer Cindy Sherman in 2012 wasn\u2019t \u201chis only prior connection to the museum.\u201d"} +{"question": "Who is \"Writings on the Wall\" a tribute to?", "paragraph": "An article last Sunday about three women involved with the play \u201cEclipsed,\u201d which focuses on Liberia\u2019s civil war, using information from a publicist, referred incorrectly to a big-budget project that one of the women, the director Liesl Tommy, is working on. It is a stage adaptation of a movie, not a movie. \u2022 An article last Sunday about an exhibition that Steve Martin is curating at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles misstated part of the name of a musical that he is working on with Edie Brickell. It is \u201cBright Star,\u201d not \u201cBright Eyes.\u201d The article also referred incorrectly to Mr. Martin\u2019s working relationship with the museum. In 2003, Mr. Martin wrote wall text for artworks in the exhibition \u201cWritings on the Wall\u201d; his tribute to the photographer Cindy Sherman in 2012 wasn\u2019t \u201chis only prior connection to the museum.\u201d And a picture credit with the article misidentified the source of the image \u201cMountains in Snow: Rocky Mountain Paintings VII.\u201d It was the Thomson Collection/Art Gallery of Ontario, not Michael Cullen. BOOK REVIEW", "answer": "Cindy Sherman", "sentence": "In 2003, Mr. Martin wrote wall text for artworks in the exhibition \u201cWritings on the Wall\u201d; his tribute to the photographer Cindy Sherman in 2012 wasn\u2019t \u201chis only prior connection to the museum.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "An article last Sunday about three women involved with the play \u201cEclipsed,\u201d which focuses on Liberia\u2019s civil war, using information from a publicist, referred incorrectly to a big-budget project that one of the women, the director Liesl Tommy, is working on. It is a stage adaptation of a movie, not a movie. \u2022 An article last Sunday about an exhibition that Steve Martin is curating at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles misstated part of the name of a musical that he is working on with Edie Brickell. It is \u201cBright Star,\u201d not \u201cBright Eyes.\u201d The article also referred incorrectly to Mr. Martin\u2019s working relationship with the museum. In 2003, Mr. Martin wrote wall text for artworks in the exhibition \u201cWritings on the Wall\u201d; his tribute to the photographer Cindy Sherman in 2012 wasn\u2019t \u201chis only prior connection to the museum.\u201d And a picture credit with the article misidentified the source of the image \u201cMountains in Snow: Rocky Mountain Paintings VII.\u201d It was the Thomson Collection/Art Gallery of Ontario, not Michael Cullen. BOOK REVIEW", "paragraph_answer": "An article last Sunday about three women involved with the play \u201cEclipsed,\u201d which focuses on Liberia\u2019s civil war, using information from a publicist, referred incorrectly to a big-budget project that one of the women, the director Liesl Tommy, is working on. It is a stage adaptation of a movie, not a movie. \u2022 An article last Sunday about an exhibition that Steve Martin is curating at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles misstated part of the name of a musical that he is working on with Edie Brickell. It is \u201cBright Star,\u201d not \u201cBright Eyes.\u201d The article also referred incorrectly to Mr. Martin\u2019s working relationship with the museum. In 2003, Mr. Martin wrote wall text for artworks in the exhibition \u201cWritings on the Wall\u201d; his tribute to the photographer Cindy Sherman in 2012 wasn\u2019t \u201chis only prior connection to the museum.\u201d And a picture credit with the article misidentified the source of the image \u201cMountains in Snow: Rocky Mountain Paintings VII.\u201d It was the Thomson Collection/Art Gallery of Ontario, not Michael Cullen. BOOK REVIEW", "sentence_answer": "In 2003, Mr. Martin wrote wall text for artworks in the exhibition \u201cWritings on the Wall\u201d; his tribute to the photographer Cindy Sherman in 2012 wasn\u2019t \u201chis only prior connection to the museum.\u201d"} +{"question": "What is the birth name of Pope Francis?", "paragraph": "SUNDAY STYLES An article on Sept. 20 about the affection felt for Pope Francis by a self-described \u201conce-erstwhile Presbyterian\u201d misspelled part of the birth name of Pope Francis. He was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio, not Borgoglia. REAL ESTATE A cover article last Sunday about new developments in New York City that have drawn criticism from neighbors described incorrectly plans by the developer Fortis Property Group to address concerns about the loss of Long Island College Hospital in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn. Fortis will donate land where NYU Langone Medical Center will build a new medical facility; Fortis itself will not build a larger hospital on the site. (The new facility will be larger than the temporary facility that NYU Langone is currently operating, but will not be a full-fledged hospital.)", "answer": "Jorge Mario Bergoglio", "sentence": "He was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio , not Borgoglia.", "paragraph_sentence": "SUNDAY STYLES An article on Sept. 20 about the affection felt for Pope Francis by a self-described \u201conce-erstwhile Presbyterian\u201d misspelled part of the birth name of Pope Francis. He was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio , not Borgoglia. REAL ESTATE A cover article last Sunday about new developments in New York City that have drawn criticism from neighbors described incorrectly plans by the developer Fortis Property Group to address concerns about the loss of Long Island College Hospital in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn. Fortis will donate land where NYU Langone Medical Center will build a new medical facility; Fortis itself will not build a larger hospital on the site. (The new facility will be larger than the temporary facility that NYU Langone is currently operating, but will not be a full-fledged hospital.)", "paragraph_answer": "SUNDAY STYLES An article on Sept. 20 about the affection felt for Pope Francis by a self-described \u201conce-erstwhile Presbyterian\u201d misspelled part of the birth name of Pope Francis. He was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio , not Borgoglia. REAL ESTATE A cover article last Sunday about new developments in New York City that have drawn criticism from neighbors described incorrectly plans by the developer Fortis Property Group to address concerns about the loss of Long Island College Hospital in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn. Fortis will donate land where NYU Langone Medical Center will build a new medical facility; Fortis itself will not build a larger hospital on the site. (The new facility will be larger than the temporary facility that NYU Langone is currently operating, but will not be a full-fledged hospital.)", "sentence_answer": "He was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio , not Borgoglia."} +{"question": "Who is donating land for a new medical facility?", "paragraph": "SUNDAY STYLES An article on Sept. 20 about the affection felt for Pope Francis by a self-described \u201conce-erstwhile Presbyterian\u201d misspelled part of the birth name of Pope Francis. He was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio, not Borgoglia. REAL ESTATE A cover article last Sunday about new developments in New York City that have drawn criticism from neighbors described incorrectly plans by the developer Fortis Property Group to address concerns about the loss of Long Island College Hospital in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn. Fortis will donate land where NYU Langone Medical Center will build a new medical facility; Fortis itself will not build a larger hospital on the site. (The new facility will be larger than the temporary facility that NYU Langone is currently operating, but will not be a full-fledged hospital.)", "answer": "Fortis Property Group", "sentence": "REAL ESTATE A cover article last Sunday about new developments in New York City that have drawn criticism from neighbors described incorrectly plans by the developer Fortis Property Group to address concerns about the loss of Long Island College Hospital in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn.", "paragraph_sentence": "SUNDAY STYLES An article on Sept. 20 about the affection felt for Pope Francis by a self-described \u201conce-erstwhile Presbyterian\u201d misspelled part of the birth name of Pope Francis. He was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio, not Borgoglia. REAL ESTATE A cover article last Sunday about new developments in New York City that have drawn criticism from neighbors described incorrectly plans by the developer Fortis Property Group to address concerns about the loss of Long Island College Hospital in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn. Fortis will donate land where NYU Langone Medical Center will build a new medical facility; Fortis itself will not build a larger hospital on the site. (The new facility will be larger than the temporary facility that NYU Langone is currently operating, but will not be a full-fledged hospital.)", "paragraph_answer": "SUNDAY STYLES An article on Sept. 20 about the affection felt for Pope Francis by a self-described \u201conce-erstwhile Presbyterian\u201d misspelled part of the birth name of Pope Francis. He was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio, not Borgoglia. REAL ESTATE A cover article last Sunday about new developments in New York City that have drawn criticism from neighbors described incorrectly plans by the developer Fortis Property Group to address concerns about the loss of Long Island College Hospital in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn. Fortis will donate land where NYU Langone Medical Center will build a new medical facility; Fortis itself will not build a larger hospital on the site. (The new facility will be larger than the temporary facility that NYU Langone is currently operating, but will not be a full-fledged hospital.)", "sentence_answer": "REAL ESTATE A cover article last Sunday about new developments in New York City that have drawn criticism from neighbors described incorrectly plans by the developer Fortis Property Group to address concerns about the loss of Long Island College Hospital in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn."} +{"question": "What hospital is in the Cobble Hill, Brooklyn?", "paragraph": "SUNDAY STYLES An article on Sept. 20 about the affection felt for Pope Francis by a self-described \u201conce-erstwhile Presbyterian\u201d misspelled part of the birth name of Pope Francis. He was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio, not Borgoglia. REAL ESTATE A cover article last Sunday about new developments in New York City that have drawn criticism from neighbors described incorrectly plans by the developer Fortis Property Group to address concerns about the loss of Long Island College Hospital in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn. Fortis will donate land where NYU Langone Medical Center will build a new medical facility; Fortis itself will not build a larger hospital on the site. (The new facility will be larger than the temporary facility that NYU Langone is currently operating, but will not be a full-fledged hospital.)", "answer": "Long Island College Hospital", "sentence": "REAL ESTATE A cover article last Sunday about new developments in New York City that have drawn criticism from neighbors described incorrectly plans by the developer Fortis Property Group to address concerns about the loss of Long Island College Hospital in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn.", "paragraph_sentence": "SUNDAY STYLES An article on Sept. 20 about the affection felt for Pope Francis by a self-described \u201conce-erstwhile Presbyterian\u201d misspelled part of the birth name of Pope Francis. He was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio, not Borgoglia. REAL ESTATE A cover article last Sunday about new developments in New York City that have drawn criticism from neighbors described incorrectly plans by the developer Fortis Property Group to address concerns about the loss of Long Island College Hospital in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn. Fortis will donate land where NYU Langone Medical Center will build a new medical facility; Fortis itself will not build a larger hospital on the site. (The new facility will be larger than the temporary facility that NYU Langone is currently operating, but will not be a full-fledged hospital.)", "paragraph_answer": "SUNDAY STYLES An article on Sept. 20 about the affection felt for Pope Francis by a self-described \u201conce-erstwhile Presbyterian\u201d misspelled part of the birth name of Pope Francis. He was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio, not Borgoglia. REAL ESTATE A cover article last Sunday about new developments in New York City that have drawn criticism from neighbors described incorrectly plans by the developer Fortis Property Group to address concerns about the loss of Long Island College Hospital in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn. Fortis will donate land where NYU Langone Medical Center will build a new medical facility; Fortis itself will not build a larger hospital on the site. (The new facility will be larger than the temporary facility that NYU Langone is currently operating, but will not be a full-fledged hospital.)", "sentence_answer": "REAL ESTATE A cover article last Sunday about new developments in New York City that have drawn criticism from neighbors described incorrectly plans by the developer Fortis Property Group to address concerns about the loss of Long Island College Hospital in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn."} +{"question": "What is the name of the hospital that is receiving a land from Fortis?", "paragraph": "SUNDAY STYLES An article on Sept. 20 about the affection felt for Pope Francis by a self-described \u201conce-erstwhile Presbyterian\u201d misspelled part of the birth name of Pope Francis. He was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio, not Borgoglia. REAL ESTATE A cover article last Sunday about new developments in New York City that have drawn criticism from neighbors described incorrectly plans by the developer Fortis Property Group to address concerns about the loss of Long Island College Hospital in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn. Fortis will donate land where NYU Langone Medical Center will build a new medical facility; Fortis itself will not build a larger hospital on the site. (The new facility will be larger than the temporary facility that NYU Langone is currently operating, but will not be a full-fledged hospital.)", "answer": "NYU Langone Medical Center", "sentence": "Fortis will donate land where NYU Langone Medical Center will build a new medical facility; Fortis itself will not build a larger hospital on the site.", "paragraph_sentence": "SUNDAY STYLES An article on Sept. 20 about the affection felt for Pope Francis by a self-described \u201conce-erstwhile Presbyterian\u201d misspelled part of the birth name of Pope Francis. He was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio, not Borgoglia. REAL ESTATE A cover article last Sunday about new developments in New York City that have drawn criticism from neighbors described incorrectly plans by the developer Fortis Property Group to address concerns about the loss of Long Island College Hospital in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn. Fortis will donate land where NYU Langone Medical Center will build a new medical facility; Fortis itself will not build a larger hospital on the site. (The new facility will be larger than the temporary facility that NYU Langone is currently operating, but will not be a full-fledged hospital.)", "paragraph_answer": "SUNDAY STYLES An article on Sept. 20 about the affection felt for Pope Francis by a self-described \u201conce-erstwhile Presbyterian\u201d misspelled part of the birth name of Pope Francis. He was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio, not Borgoglia. REAL ESTATE A cover article last Sunday about new developments in New York City that have drawn criticism from neighbors described incorrectly plans by the developer Fortis Property Group to address concerns about the loss of Long Island College Hospital in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn. Fortis will donate land where NYU Langone Medical Center will build a new medical facility; Fortis itself will not build a larger hospital on the site. (The new facility will be larger than the temporary facility that NYU Langone is currently operating, but will not be a full-fledged hospital.)", "sentence_answer": "Fortis will donate land where NYU Langone Medical Center will build a new medical facility; Fortis itself will not build a larger hospital on the site."} +{"question": "What is the name of the theater in the West End?", "paragraph": "Because of an editing error, the Frugal Traveler column last Sunday, about a budget-friendly day in London, misstated, in one instance, the name of a theater in the West End. As the column correctly noted elsewhere, it is the St. James, not the St. James\u2019s. The column also referred imprecisely to a route to the Stepney Green Underground station in East London. While it is possible to get to Stepney Green from Victoria station on the Circle line in 23 minutes, it requires a transfer; it is not direct. (The District line takes about the same time and is direct.) MAGAZINE", "answer": "St. James", "sentence": "As the column correctly noted elsewhere, it is the St. James , not the St. James\u2019s.", "paragraph_sentence": "Because of an editing error, the Frugal Traveler column last Sunday, about a budget-friendly day in London, misstated, in one instance, the name of a theater in the West End. As the column correctly noted elsewhere, it is the St. James , not the St. James\u2019s. The column also referred imprecisely to a route to the Stepney Green Underground station in East London. While it is possible to get to Stepney Green from Victoria station on the Circle line in 23 minutes, it requires a transfer; it is not direct. (The District line takes about the same time and is direct.) MAGAZINE", "paragraph_answer": "Because of an editing error, the Frugal Traveler column last Sunday, about a budget-friendly day in London, misstated, in one instance, the name of a theater in the West End. As the column correctly noted elsewhere, it is the St. James , not the St. James\u2019s. The column also referred imprecisely to a route to the Stepney Green Underground station in East London. While it is possible to get to Stepney Green from Victoria station on the Circle line in 23 minutes, it requires a transfer; it is not direct. (The District line takes about the same time and is direct.) MAGAZINE", "sentence_answer": "As the column correctly noted elsewhere, it is the St. James , not the St. James\u2019s."} +{"question": "Where is the Stepney Green Underground station?", "paragraph": "Because of an editing error, the Frugal Traveler column last Sunday, about a budget-friendly day in London, misstated, in one instance, the name of a theater in the West End. As the column correctly noted elsewhere, it is the St. James, not the St. James\u2019s. The column also referred imprecisely to a route to the Stepney Green Underground station in East London. While it is possible to get to Stepney Green from Victoria station on the Circle line in 23 minutes, it requires a transfer; it is not direct. (The District line takes about the same time and is direct.) MAGAZINE", "answer": "East London", "sentence": "The column also referred imprecisely to a route to the Stepney Green Underground station in East London .", "paragraph_sentence": "Because of an editing error, the Frugal Traveler column last Sunday, about a budget-friendly day in London, misstated, in one instance, the name of a theater in the West End. As the column correctly noted elsewhere, it is the St. James, not the St. James\u2019s. The column also referred imprecisely to a route to the Stepney Green Underground station in East London . While it is possible to get to Stepney Green from Victoria station on the Circle line in 23 minutes, it requires a transfer; it is not direct. (The District line takes about the same time and is direct.) MAGAZINE", "paragraph_answer": "Because of an editing error, the Frugal Traveler column last Sunday, about a budget-friendly day in London, misstated, in one instance, the name of a theater in the West End. As the column correctly noted elsewhere, it is the St. James, not the St. James\u2019s. The column also referred imprecisely to a route to the Stepney Green Underground station in East London . While it is possible to get to Stepney Green from Victoria station on the Circle line in 23 minutes, it requires a transfer; it is not direct. (The District line takes about the same time and is direct.) MAGAZINE", "sentence_answer": "The column also referred imprecisely to a route to the Stepney Green Underground station in East London ."} +{"question": "How long does it take to get to Stepney Green Underground using the circle line?", "paragraph": "Because of an editing error, the Frugal Traveler column last Sunday, about a budget-friendly day in London, misstated, in one instance, the name of a theater in the West End. As the column correctly noted elsewhere, it is the St. James, not the St. James\u2019s. The column also referred imprecisely to a route to the Stepney Green Underground station in East London. While it is possible to get to Stepney Green from Victoria station on the Circle line in 23 minutes, it requires a transfer; it is not direct. (The District line takes about the same time and is direct.) MAGAZINE", "answer": "23 minutes", "sentence": "While it is possible to get to Stepney Green from Victoria station on the Circle line in 23 minutes , it requires a transfer; it is not direct.", "paragraph_sentence": "Because of an editing error, the Frugal Traveler column last Sunday, about a budget-friendly day in London, misstated, in one instance, the name of a theater in the West End. As the column correctly noted elsewhere, it is the St. James, not the St. James\u2019s. The column also referred imprecisely to a route to the Stepney Green Underground station in East London. While it is possible to get to Stepney Green from Victoria station on the Circle line in 23 minutes , it requires a transfer; it is not direct. (The District line takes about the same time and is direct.) MAGAZINE", "paragraph_answer": "Because of an editing error, the Frugal Traveler column last Sunday, about a budget-friendly day in London, misstated, in one instance, the name of a theater in the West End. As the column correctly noted elsewhere, it is the St. James, not the St. James\u2019s. The column also referred imprecisely to a route to the Stepney Green Underground station in East London. While it is possible to get to Stepney Green from Victoria station on the Circle line in 23 minutes , it requires a transfer; it is not direct. (The District line takes about the same time and is direct.) MAGAZINE", "sentence_answer": "While it is possible to get to Stepney Green from Victoria station on the Circle line in 23 minutes , it requires a transfer; it is not direct."} +{"question": "Which station requires a transfer to get to Stepney Green?", "paragraph": "Because of an editing error, the Frugal Traveler column last Sunday, about a budget-friendly day in London, misstated, in one instance, the name of a theater in the West End. As the column correctly noted elsewhere, it is the St. James, not the St. James\u2019s. The column also referred imprecisely to a route to the Stepney Green Underground station in East London. While it is possible to get to Stepney Green from Victoria station on the Circle line in 23 minutes, it requires a transfer; it is not direct. (The District line takes about the same time and is direct.) MAGAZINE", "answer": "Victoria station", "sentence": "While it is possible to get to Stepney Green from Victoria station on the Circle line in 23 minutes, it requires a transfer; it is not direct.", "paragraph_sentence": "Because of an editing error, the Frugal Traveler column last Sunday, about a budget-friendly day in London, misstated, in one instance, the name of a theater in the West End. As the column correctly noted elsewhere, it is the St. James, not the St. James\u2019s. The column also referred imprecisely to a route to the Stepney Green Underground station in East London. While it is possible to get to Stepney Green from Victoria station on the Circle line in 23 minutes, it requires a transfer; it is not direct. (The District line takes about the same time and is direct.) MAGAZINE", "paragraph_answer": "Because of an editing error, the Frugal Traveler column last Sunday, about a budget-friendly day in London, misstated, in one instance, the name of a theater in the West End. As the column correctly noted elsewhere, it is the St. James, not the St. James\u2019s. The column also referred imprecisely to a route to the Stepney Green Underground station in East London. While it is possible to get to Stepney Green from Victoria station on the Circle line in 23 minutes, it requires a transfer; it is not direct. (The District line takes about the same time and is direct.) MAGAZINE", "sentence_answer": "While it is possible to get to Stepney Green from Victoria station on the Circle line in 23 minutes, it requires a transfer; it is not direct."} +{"question": "How many people did Mr. Obama address during his speech at American University?", "paragraph": "\u201cLet\u2019s not mince words: The choice we face is ultimately between diplomacy and some form of war \u2014 maybe not tomorrow, maybe not three months from now, but soon,\u201d Mr. Obama told about 200 people in a speech at American University. \u201cHow can we in good conscience justify war before we\u2019ve tested a diplomatic agreement that achieves our objectives?\u201d Mr. Obama, opening a new, more overtly political phase of his public campaign for the accord, portrayed the coming vote in Congress to approve or reject the deal as the most consequential foreign policy decision for lawmakers since Congress voted in 2003 to authorize the invasion of Iraq. He implored them to \u201cshut out the noise\u201d and back the deal.", "answer": "200", "sentence": "\u201cLet\u2019s not mince words: The choice we face is ultimately between diplomacy and some form of war \u2014 maybe not tomorrow, maybe not three months from now, but soon,\u201d Mr. Obama told about 200 people in a speech at American University.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cLet\u2019s not mince words: The choice we face is ultimately between diplomacy and some form of war \u2014 maybe not tomorrow, maybe not three months from now, but soon,\u201d Mr. Obama told about 200 people in a speech at American University. \u201cHow can we in good conscience justify war before we\u2019ve tested a diplomatic agreement that achieves our objectives?\u201d Mr. Obama, opening a new, more overtly political phase of his public campaign for the accord, portrayed the coming vote in Congress to approve or reject the deal as the most consequential foreign policy decision for lawmakers since Congress voted in 2003 to authorize the invasion of Iraq. He implored them to \u201cshut out the noise\u201d and back the deal.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cLet\u2019s not mince words: The choice we face is ultimately between diplomacy and some form of war \u2014 maybe not tomorrow, maybe not three months from now, but soon,\u201d Mr. Obama told about 200 people in a speech at American University. \u201cHow can we in good conscience justify war before we\u2019ve tested a diplomatic agreement that achieves our objectives?\u201d Mr. Obama, opening a new, more overtly political phase of his public campaign for the accord, portrayed the coming vote in Congress to approve or reject the deal as the most consequential foreign policy decision for lawmakers since Congress voted in 2003 to authorize the invasion of Iraq. He implored them to \u201cshut out the noise\u201d and back the deal.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cLet\u2019s not mince words: The choice we face is ultimately between diplomacy and some form of war \u2014 maybe not tomorrow, maybe not three months from now, but soon,\u201d Mr. Obama told about 200 people in a speech at American University."} +{"question": "Where did Mr. Obama give his speech?", "paragraph": "\u201cLet\u2019s not mince words: The choice we face is ultimately between diplomacy and some form of war \u2014 maybe not tomorrow, maybe not three months from now, but soon,\u201d Mr. Obama told about 200 people in a speech at American University. \u201cHow can we in good conscience justify war before we\u2019ve tested a diplomatic agreement that achieves our objectives?\u201d Mr. Obama, opening a new, more overtly political phase of his public campaign for the accord, portrayed the coming vote in Congress to approve or reject the deal as the most consequential foreign policy decision for lawmakers since Congress voted in 2003 to authorize the invasion of Iraq. He implored them to \u201cshut out the noise\u201d and back the deal.", "answer": "American University", "sentence": "\u201cLet\u2019s not mince words: The choice we face is ultimately between diplomacy and some form of war \u2014 maybe not tomorrow, maybe not three months from now, but soon,\u201d Mr. Obama told about 200 people in a speech at American University .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cLet\u2019s not mince words: The choice we face is ultimately between diplomacy and some form of war \u2014 maybe not tomorrow, maybe not three months from now, but soon,\u201d Mr. Obama told about 200 people in a speech at American University . \u201cHow can we in good conscience justify war before we\u2019ve tested a diplomatic agreement that achieves our objectives?\u201d Mr. Obama, opening a new, more overtly political phase of his public campaign for the accord, portrayed the coming vote in Congress to approve or reject the deal as the most consequential foreign policy decision for lawmakers since Congress voted in 2003 to authorize the invasion of Iraq. He implored them to \u201cshut out the noise\u201d and back the deal.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cLet\u2019s not mince words: The choice we face is ultimately between diplomacy and some form of war \u2014 maybe not tomorrow, maybe not three months from now, but soon,\u201d Mr. Obama told about 200 people in a speech at American University . \u201cHow can we in good conscience justify war before we\u2019ve tested a diplomatic agreement that achieves our objectives?\u201d Mr. Obama, opening a new, more overtly political phase of his public campaign for the accord, portrayed the coming vote in Congress to approve or reject the deal as the most consequential foreign policy decision for lawmakers since Congress voted in 2003 to authorize the invasion of Iraq. He implored them to \u201cshut out the noise\u201d and back the deal.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cLet\u2019s not mince words: The choice we face is ultimately between diplomacy and some form of war \u2014 maybe not tomorrow, maybe not three months from now, but soon,\u201d Mr. Obama told about 200 people in a speech at American University ."} +{"question": "What was Mr. Obama opening up about during his speech at American University?", "paragraph": "\u201cLet\u2019s not mince words: The choice we face is ultimately between diplomacy and some form of war \u2014 maybe not tomorrow, maybe not three months from now, but soon,\u201d Mr. Obama told about 200 people in a speech at American University. \u201cHow can we in good conscience justify war before we\u2019ve tested a diplomatic agreement that achieves our objectives?\u201d Mr. Obama, opening a new, more overtly political phase of his public campaign for the accord, portrayed the coming vote in Congress to approve or reject the deal as the most consequential foreign policy decision for lawmakers since Congress voted in 2003 to authorize the invasion of Iraq. He implored them to \u201cshut out the noise\u201d and back the deal.", "answer": "a new, more overtly political phase of his public campaign", "sentence": "Mr. Obama, opening a new, more overtly political phase of his public campaign for the accord, portrayed the coming vote in Congress to approve or reject the deal as the most consequential foreign policy decision for lawmakers since Congress voted in 2003 to authorize the invasion of Iraq.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cLet\u2019s not mince words: The choice we face is ultimately between diplomacy and some form of war \u2014 maybe not tomorrow, maybe not three months from now, but soon,\u201d Mr. Obama told about 200 people in a speech at American University. \u201cHow can we in good conscience justify war before we\u2019ve tested a diplomatic agreement that achieves our objectives?\u201d Mr. Obama, opening a new, more overtly political phase of his public campaign for the accord, portrayed the coming vote in Congress to approve or reject the deal as the most consequential foreign policy decision for lawmakers since Congress voted in 2003 to authorize the invasion of Iraq. He implored them to \u201cshut out the noise\u201d and back the deal.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cLet\u2019s not mince words: The choice we face is ultimately between diplomacy and some form of war \u2014 maybe not tomorrow, maybe not three months from now, but soon,\u201d Mr. Obama told about 200 people in a speech at American University. \u201cHow can we in good conscience justify war before we\u2019ve tested a diplomatic agreement that achieves our objectives?\u201d Mr. Obama, opening a new, more overtly political phase of his public campaign for the accord, portrayed the coming vote in Congress to approve or reject the deal as the most consequential foreign policy decision for lawmakers since Congress voted in 2003 to authorize the invasion of Iraq. He implored them to \u201cshut out the noise\u201d and back the deal.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Obama, opening a new, more overtly political phase of his public campaign for the accord, portrayed the coming vote in Congress to approve or reject the deal as the most consequential foreign policy decision for lawmakers since Congress voted in 2003 to authorize the invasion of Iraq."} +{"question": "What was the consequential foreign policy decision Congress voted for in 2003?", "paragraph": "\u201cLet\u2019s not mince words: The choice we face is ultimately between diplomacy and some form of war \u2014 maybe not tomorrow, maybe not three months from now, but soon,\u201d Mr. Obama told about 200 people in a speech at American University. \u201cHow can we in good conscience justify war before we\u2019ve tested a diplomatic agreement that achieves our objectives?\u201d Mr. Obama, opening a new, more overtly political phase of his public campaign for the accord, portrayed the coming vote in Congress to approve or reject the deal as the most consequential foreign policy decision for lawmakers since Congress voted in 2003 to authorize the invasion of Iraq. He implored them to \u201cshut out the noise\u201d and back the deal.", "answer": "the invasion of Iraq", "sentence": "Mr. Obama, opening a new, more overtly political phase of his public campaign for the accord, portrayed the coming vote in Congress to approve or reject the deal as the most consequential foreign policy decision for lawmakers since Congress voted in 2003 to authorize the invasion of Iraq .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cLet\u2019s not mince words: The choice we face is ultimately between diplomacy and some form of war \u2014 maybe not tomorrow, maybe not three months from now, but soon,\u201d Mr. Obama told about 200 people in a speech at American University. \u201cHow can we in good conscience justify war before we\u2019ve tested a diplomatic agreement that achieves our objectives?\u201d Mr. Obama, opening a new, more overtly political phase of his public campaign for the accord, portrayed the coming vote in Congress to approve or reject the deal as the most consequential foreign policy decision for lawmakers since Congress voted in 2003 to authorize the invasion of Iraq . He implored them to \u201cshut out the noise\u201d and back the deal.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cLet\u2019s not mince words: The choice we face is ultimately between diplomacy and some form of war \u2014 maybe not tomorrow, maybe not three months from now, but soon,\u201d Mr. Obama told about 200 people in a speech at American University. \u201cHow can we in good conscience justify war before we\u2019ve tested a diplomatic agreement that achieves our objectives?\u201d Mr. Obama, opening a new, more overtly political phase of his public campaign for the accord, portrayed the coming vote in Congress to approve or reject the deal as the most consequential foreign policy decision for lawmakers since Congress voted in 2003 to authorize the invasion of Iraq . He implored them to \u201cshut out the noise\u201d and back the deal.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Obama, opening a new, more overtly political phase of his public campaign for the accord, portrayed the coming vote in Congress to approve or reject the deal as the most consequential foreign policy decision for lawmakers since Congress voted in 2003 to authorize the invasion of Iraq ."} +{"question": "What did Mr. Obama's speech leave no room for questioning of?", "paragraph": "Delivered in stark terms that surprised some foreign policy analysts and left no room for questioning whether the agreement is good for American security \u2014 \u201cIt\u2019s not even close,\u201d Mr. Obama declared at one point \u2014 the president\u2019s speech was a striking display of certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public and presented a dilemma for lawmakers, including many in his own party.", "answer": "whether the agreement is good for American security", "sentence": "Delivered in stark terms that surprised some foreign policy analysts and left no room for questioning whether the agreement is good for American security \u2014 \u201cIt\u2019s not even close,\u201d Mr. Obama declared at one point \u2014 the president\u2019s speech was a striking display of certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public and presented a dilemma for lawmakers, including many in his own party.", "paragraph_sentence": " Delivered in stark terms that surprised some foreign policy analysts and left no room for questioning whether the agreement is good for American security \u2014 \u201cIt\u2019s not even close,\u201d Mr. Obama declared at one point \u2014 the president\u2019s speech was a striking display of certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public and presented a dilemma for lawmakers, including many in his own party. ", "paragraph_answer": "Delivered in stark terms that surprised some foreign policy analysts and left no room for questioning whether the agreement is good for American security \u2014 \u201cIt\u2019s not even close,\u201d Mr. Obama declared at one point \u2014 the president\u2019s speech was a striking display of certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public and presented a dilemma for lawmakers, including many in his own party.", "sentence_answer": "Delivered in stark terms that surprised some foreign policy analysts and left no room for questioning whether the agreement is good for American security \u2014 \u201cIt\u2019s not even close,\u201d Mr. Obama declared at one point \u2014 the president\u2019s speech was a striking display of certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public and presented a dilemma for lawmakers, including many in his own party."} +{"question": "What was Mr. Obama's speech a striking display of?", "paragraph": "Delivered in stark terms that surprised some foreign policy analysts and left no room for questioning whether the agreement is good for American security \u2014 \u201cIt\u2019s not even close,\u201d Mr. Obama declared at one point \u2014 the president\u2019s speech was a striking display of certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public and presented a dilemma for lawmakers, including many in his own party.", "answer": "certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public", "sentence": "Delivered in stark terms that surprised some foreign policy analysts and left no room for questioning whether the agreement is good for American security \u2014 \u201cIt\u2019s not even close,\u201d Mr. Obama declared at one point \u2014 the president\u2019s speech was a striking display of certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public and presented a dilemma for lawmakers, including many in his own party.", "paragraph_sentence": " Delivered in stark terms that surprised some foreign policy analysts and left no room for questioning whether the agreement is good for American security \u2014 \u201cIt\u2019s not even close,\u201d Mr. Obama declared at one point \u2014 the president\u2019s speech was a striking display of certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public and presented a dilemma for lawmakers, including many in his own party. ", "paragraph_answer": "Delivered in stark terms that surprised some foreign policy analysts and left no room for questioning whether the agreement is good for American security \u2014 \u201cIt\u2019s not even close,\u201d Mr. Obama declared at one point \u2014 the president\u2019s speech was a striking display of certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public and presented a dilemma for lawmakers, including many in his own party.", "sentence_answer": "Delivered in stark terms that surprised some foreign policy analysts and left no room for questioning whether the agreement is good for American security \u2014 \u201cIt\u2019s not even close,\u201d Mr. Obama declared at one point \u2014 the president\u2019s speech was a striking display of certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public and presented a dilemma for lawmakers, including many in his own party."} +{"question": "What did Mr. Obama declare at one point during his speech?", "paragraph": "Delivered in stark terms that surprised some foreign policy analysts and left no room for questioning whether the agreement is good for American security \u2014 \u201cIt\u2019s not even close,\u201d Mr. Obama declared at one point \u2014 the president\u2019s speech was a striking display of certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public and presented a dilemma for lawmakers, including many in his own party.", "answer": "It\u2019s not even close", "sentence": "Delivered in stark terms that surprised some foreign policy analysts and left no room for questioning whether the agreement is good for American security \u2014 \u201c It\u2019s not even close ,\u201d Mr. Obama declared at one point \u2014 the president\u2019s speech was a striking display of certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public and presented a dilemma for lawmakers, including many in his own party.", "paragraph_sentence": " Delivered in stark terms that surprised some foreign policy analysts and left no room for questioning whether the agreement is good for American security \u2014 \u201c It\u2019s not even close ,\u201d Mr. Obama declared at one point \u2014 the president\u2019s speech was a striking display of certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public and presented a dilemma for lawmakers, including many in his own party. ", "paragraph_answer": "Delivered in stark terms that surprised some foreign policy analysts and left no room for questioning whether the agreement is good for American security \u2014 \u201c It\u2019s not even close ,\u201d Mr. Obama declared at one point \u2014 the president\u2019s speech was a striking display of certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public and presented a dilemma for lawmakers, including many in his own party.", "sentence_answer": "Delivered in stark terms that surprised some foreign policy analysts and left no room for questioning whether the agreement is good for American security \u2014 \u201c It\u2019s not even close ,\u201d Mr. Obama declared at one point \u2014 the president\u2019s speech was a striking display of certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public and presented a dilemma for lawmakers, including many in his own party."} +{"question": "Who did the diplomatic deal present a dilemma for?", "paragraph": "Delivered in stark terms that surprised some foreign policy analysts and left no room for questioning whether the agreement is good for American security \u2014 \u201cIt\u2019s not even close,\u201d Mr. Obama declared at one point \u2014 the president\u2019s speech was a striking display of certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public and presented a dilemma for lawmakers, including many in his own party.", "answer": "lawmakers", "sentence": "Delivered in stark terms that surprised some foreign policy analysts and left no room for questioning whether the agreement is good for American security \u2014 \u201cIt\u2019s not even close,\u201d Mr. Obama declared at one point \u2014 the president\u2019s speech was a striking display of certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public and presented a dilemma for lawmakers , including many in his own party.", "paragraph_sentence": " Delivered in stark terms that surprised some foreign policy analysts and left no room for questioning whether the agreement is good for American security \u2014 \u201cIt\u2019s not even close,\u201d Mr. Obama declared at one point \u2014 the president\u2019s speech was a striking display of certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public and presented a dilemma for lawmakers , including many in his own party. ", "paragraph_answer": "Delivered in stark terms that surprised some foreign policy analysts and left no room for questioning whether the agreement is good for American security \u2014 \u201cIt\u2019s not even close,\u201d Mr. Obama declared at one point \u2014 the president\u2019s speech was a striking display of certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public and presented a dilemma for lawmakers , including many in his own party.", "sentence_answer": "Delivered in stark terms that surprised some foreign policy analysts and left no room for questioning whether the agreement is good for American security \u2014 \u201cIt\u2019s not even close,\u201d Mr. Obama declared at one point \u2014 the president\u2019s speech was a striking display of certitude about a diplomatic deal that has split the American public and presented a dilemma for lawmakers , including many in his own party."} +{"question": "Who did Mr. Obama criticize during his speech?", "paragraph": "Mr. Obama criticized Republicans who are pressing forward with legislation to block the accord, which is on track for a vote in September. Opposition to the agreement, he said, stems from \u201cknee-jerk partisanship that has become all too familiar, rhetoric that renders every decision made to be a disaster, a surrender.\u201d He said hard-liners in Iran who chant \u201cDeath to America\u201d were \u201cmaking common cause with the Republican caucus.\u201d Lawmakers who oppose the deal said they were not persuaded, and some said they resented the president\u2019s tone. Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the majority leader, said the speech had done a disservice to lawmakers in both parties who \u201chave serious and heartfelt concerns.\u201d \u201cThese Democrats and Republicans deserved serious answers today, not some outrageous attempt to equate their search for answers with supporting chants of \u2018Death to America,\u2019 \u201d Mr. McConnell said, adding that Democrats who had declared their opposition would be \u201cespecially insulted\u201d by the president\u2019s remarks. \u201cThis goes way over the line of civil discourse,\u201d he said. In his speech, the president invoked the legacy of John F. Kennedy, who in 1963 appeared on the same campus to push for a nuclear test ban treaty with the Soviet Union. But in making his case, Mr. Obama was also returning to a theme that helped him rise to power. As a first-term senator, Mr. Obama gained political prominence in part because of his strong opposition to the war in Iraq. It helped him win the 2008 Democratic nomination \u2014 defeating Hillary Rodham Clinton, who backed the invasion and later became his secretary of state \u2014 and the presidency. Now, as a second-term president working to defend an ambitious diplomatic nonproliferation accord with Iran and protect his legacy, Mr. Obama is conjuring the antiwar fervor that animates his party\u2019s liberal base.", "answer": "Republicans who are pressing forward with legislation to block the accord", "sentence": "Mr. Obama criticized Republicans who are pressing forward with legislation to block the accord , which is on track for a vote in September.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Obama criticized Republicans who are pressing forward with legislation to block the accord , which is on track for a vote in September. Opposition to the agreement, he said, stems from \u201cknee-jerk partisanship that has become all too familiar, rhetoric that renders every decision made to be a disaster, a surrender.\u201d He said hard-liners in Iran who chant \u201cDeath to America\u201d were \u201cmaking common cause with the Republican caucus.\u201d Lawmakers who oppose the deal said they were not persuaded, and some said they resented the president\u2019s tone. Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the majority leader, said the speech had done a disservice to lawmakers in both parties who \u201chave serious and heartfelt concerns.\u201d \u201cThese Democrats and Republicans deserved serious answers today, not some outrageous attempt to equate their search for answers with supporting chants of \u2018Death to America,\u2019 \u201d Mr. McConnell said, adding that Democrats who had declared their opposition would be \u201cespecially insulted\u201d by the president\u2019s remarks. \u201cThis goes way over the line of civil discourse,\u201d he said. In his speech, the president invoked the legacy of John F. Kennedy, who in 1963 appeared on the same campus to push for a nuclear test ban treaty with the Soviet Union. But in making his case, Mr. Obama was also returning to a theme that helped him rise to power. As a first-term senator, Mr. Obama gained political prominence in part because of his strong opposition to the war in Iraq. It helped him win the 2008 Democratic nomination \u2014 defeating Hillary Rodham Clinton, who backed the invasion and later became his secretary of state \u2014 and the presidency. Now, as a second-term president working to defend an ambitious diplomatic nonproliferation accord with Iran and protect his legacy, Mr. Obama is conjuring the antiwar fervor that animates his party\u2019s liberal base.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Obama criticized Republicans who are pressing forward with legislation to block the accord , which is on track for a vote in September. Opposition to the agreement, he said, stems from \u201cknee-jerk partisanship that has become all too familiar, rhetoric that renders every decision made to be a disaster, a surrender.\u201d He said hard-liners in Iran who chant \u201cDeath to America\u201d were \u201cmaking common cause with the Republican caucus.\u201d Lawmakers who oppose the deal said they were not persuaded, and some said they resented the president\u2019s tone. Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the majority leader, said the speech had done a disservice to lawmakers in both parties who \u201chave serious and heartfelt concerns.\u201d \u201cThese Democrats and Republicans deserved serious answers today, not some outrageous attempt to equate their search for answers with supporting chants of \u2018Death to America,\u2019 \u201d Mr. McConnell said, adding that Democrats who had declared their opposition would be \u201cespecially insulted\u201d by the president\u2019s remarks. \u201cThis goes way over the line of civil discourse,\u201d he said. In his speech, the president invoked the legacy of John F. Kennedy, who in 1963 appeared on the same campus to push for a nuclear test ban treaty with the Soviet Union. But in making his case, Mr. Obama was also returning to a theme that helped him rise to power. As a first-term senator, Mr. Obama gained political prominence in part because of his strong opposition to the war in Iraq. It helped him win the 2008 Democratic nomination \u2014 defeating Hillary Rodham Clinton, who backed the invasion and later became his secretary of state \u2014 and the presidency. Now, as a second-term president working to defend an ambitious diplomatic nonproliferation accord with Iran and protect his legacy, Mr. Obama is conjuring the antiwar fervor that animates his party\u2019s liberal base.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Obama criticized Republicans who are pressing forward with legislation to block the accord , which is on track for a vote in September."} +{"question": "Who did Mr. Obama say hard-liners in Iran who chant \"Death to America\" were making common cause with?", "paragraph": "Mr. Obama criticized Republicans who are pressing forward with legislation to block the accord, which is on track for a vote in September. Opposition to the agreement, he said, stems from \u201cknee-jerk partisanship that has become all too familiar, rhetoric that renders every decision made to be a disaster, a surrender.\u201d He said hard-liners in Iran who chant \u201cDeath to America\u201d were \u201cmaking common cause with the Republican caucus.\u201d Lawmakers who oppose the deal said they were not persuaded, and some said they resented the president\u2019s tone. Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the majority leader, said the speech had done a disservice to lawmakers in both parties who \u201chave serious and heartfelt concerns.\u201d \u201cThese Democrats and Republicans deserved serious answers today, not some outrageous attempt to equate their search for answers with supporting chants of \u2018Death to America,\u2019 \u201d Mr. McConnell said, adding that Democrats who had declared their opposition would be \u201cespecially insulted\u201d by the president\u2019s remarks. \u201cThis goes way over the line of civil discourse,\u201d he said. In his speech, the president invoked the legacy of John F. Kennedy, who in 1963 appeared on the same campus to push for a nuclear test ban treaty with the Soviet Union. But in making his case, Mr. Obama was also returning to a theme that helped him rise to power. As a first-term senator, Mr. Obama gained political prominence in part because of his strong opposition to the war in Iraq. It helped him win the 2008 Democratic nomination \u2014 defeating Hillary Rodham Clinton, who backed the invasion and later became his secretary of state \u2014 and the presidency. Now, as a second-term president working to defend an ambitious diplomatic nonproliferation accord with Iran and protect his legacy, Mr. Obama is conjuring the antiwar fervor that animates his party\u2019s liberal base.", "answer": "the Republican caucus", "sentence": "He said hard-liners in Iran who chant \u201cDeath to America\u201d were \u201cmaking common cause with the Republican caucus .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Obama criticized Republicans who are pressing forward with legislation to block the accord, which is on track for a vote in September. Opposition to the agreement, he said, stems from \u201cknee-jerk partisanship that has become all too familiar, rhetoric that renders every decision made to be a disaster, a surrender.\u201d He said hard-liners in Iran who chant \u201cDeath to America\u201d were \u201cmaking common cause with the Republican caucus .\u201d Lawmakers who oppose the deal said they were not persuaded, and some said they resented the president\u2019s tone. Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the majority leader, said the speech had done a disservice to lawmakers in both parties who \u201chave serious and heartfelt concerns.\u201d \u201cThese Democrats and Republicans deserved serious answers today, not some outrageous attempt to equate their search for answers with supporting chants of \u2018Death to America,\u2019 \u201d Mr. McConnell said, adding that Democrats who had declared their opposition would be \u201cespecially insulted\u201d by the president\u2019s remarks. \u201cThis goes way over the line of civil discourse,\u201d he said. In his speech, the president invoked the legacy of John F. Kennedy, who in 1963 appeared on the same campus to push for a nuclear test ban treaty with the Soviet Union. But in making his case, Mr. Obama was also returning to a theme that helped him rise to power. As a first-term senator, Mr. Obama gained political prominence in part because of his strong opposition to the war in Iraq. It helped him win the 2008 Democratic nomination \u2014 defeating Hillary Rodham Clinton, who backed the invasion and later became his secretary of state \u2014 and the presidency. Now, as a second-term president working to defend an ambitious diplomatic nonproliferation accord with Iran and protect his legacy, Mr. Obama is conjuring the antiwar fervor that animates his party\u2019s liberal base.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Obama criticized Republicans who are pressing forward with legislation to block the accord, which is on track for a vote in September. Opposition to the agreement, he said, stems from \u201cknee-jerk partisanship that has become all too familiar, rhetoric that renders every decision made to be a disaster, a surrender.\u201d He said hard-liners in Iran who chant \u201cDeath to America\u201d were \u201cmaking common cause with the Republican caucus .\u201d Lawmakers who oppose the deal said they were not persuaded, and some said they resented the president\u2019s tone. Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the majority leader, said the speech had done a disservice to lawmakers in both parties who \u201chave serious and heartfelt concerns.\u201d \u201cThese Democrats and Republicans deserved serious answers today, not some outrageous attempt to equate their search for answers with supporting chants of \u2018Death to America,\u2019 \u201d Mr. McConnell said, adding that Democrats who had declared their opposition would be \u201cespecially insulted\u201d by the president\u2019s remarks. \u201cThis goes way over the line of civil discourse,\u201d he said. In his speech, the president invoked the legacy of John F. Kennedy, who in 1963 appeared on the same campus to push for a nuclear test ban treaty with the Soviet Union. But in making his case, Mr. Obama was also returning to a theme that helped him rise to power. As a first-term senator, Mr. Obama gained political prominence in part because of his strong opposition to the war in Iraq. It helped him win the 2008 Democratic nomination \u2014 defeating Hillary Rodham Clinton, who backed the invasion and later became his secretary of state \u2014 and the presidency. Now, as a second-term president working to defend an ambitious diplomatic nonproliferation accord with Iran and protect his legacy, Mr. Obama is conjuring the antiwar fervor that animates his party\u2019s liberal base.", "sentence_answer": "He said hard-liners in Iran who chant \u201cDeath to America\u201d were \u201cmaking common cause with the Republican caucus .\u201d"} +{"question": "What did some lawmakers resent about Mr. Obama's speech?", "paragraph": "Mr. Obama criticized Republicans who are pressing forward with legislation to block the accord, which is on track for a vote in September. Opposition to the agreement, he said, stems from \u201cknee-jerk partisanship that has become all too familiar, rhetoric that renders every decision made to be a disaster, a surrender.\u201d He said hard-liners in Iran who chant \u201cDeath to America\u201d were \u201cmaking common cause with the Republican caucus.\u201d Lawmakers who oppose the deal said they were not persuaded, and some said they resented the president\u2019s tone. Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the majority leader, said the speech had done a disservice to lawmakers in both parties who \u201chave serious and heartfelt concerns.\u201d \u201cThese Democrats and Republicans deserved serious answers today, not some outrageous attempt to equate their search for answers with supporting chants of \u2018Death to America,\u2019 \u201d Mr. McConnell said, adding that Democrats who had declared their opposition would be \u201cespecially insulted\u201d by the president\u2019s remarks. \u201cThis goes way over the line of civil discourse,\u201d he said. In his speech, the president invoked the legacy of John F. Kennedy, who in 1963 appeared on the same campus to push for a nuclear test ban treaty with the Soviet Union. But in making his case, Mr. Obama was also returning to a theme that helped him rise to power. As a first-term senator, Mr. Obama gained political prominence in part because of his strong opposition to the war in Iraq. It helped him win the 2008 Democratic nomination \u2014 defeating Hillary Rodham Clinton, who backed the invasion and later became his secretary of state \u2014 and the presidency. Now, as a second-term president working to defend an ambitious diplomatic nonproliferation accord with Iran and protect his legacy, Mr. Obama is conjuring the antiwar fervor that animates his party\u2019s liberal base.", "answer": "the president\u2019s tone", "sentence": "Lawmakers who oppose the deal said they were not persuaded, and some said they resented the president\u2019s tone .", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Obama criticized Republicans who are pressing forward with legislation to block the accord, which is on track for a vote in September. Opposition to the agreement, he said, stems from \u201cknee-jerk partisanship that has become all too familiar, rhetoric that renders every decision made to be a disaster, a surrender.\u201d He said hard-liners in Iran who chant \u201cDeath to America\u201d were \u201cmaking common cause with the Republican caucus.\u201d Lawmakers who oppose the deal said they were not persuaded, and some said they resented the president\u2019s tone . Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the majority leader, said the speech had done a disservice to lawmakers in both parties who \u201chave serious and heartfelt concerns.\u201d \u201cThese Democrats and Republicans deserved serious answers today, not some outrageous attempt to equate their search for answers with supporting chants of \u2018Death to America,\u2019 \u201d Mr. McConnell said, adding that Democrats who had declared their opposition would be \u201cespecially insulted\u201d by the president\u2019s remarks. \u201cThis goes way over the line of civil discourse,\u201d he said. In his speech, the president invoked the legacy of John F. Kennedy, who in 1963 appeared on the same campus to push for a nuclear test ban treaty with the Soviet Union. But in making his case, Mr. Obama was also returning to a theme that helped him rise to power. As a first-term senator, Mr. Obama gained political prominence in part because of his strong opposition to the war in Iraq. It helped him win the 2008 Democratic nomination \u2014 defeating Hillary Rodham Clinton, who backed the invasion and later became his secretary of state \u2014 and the presidency. Now, as a second-term president working to defend an ambitious diplomatic nonproliferation accord with Iran and protect his legacy, Mr. Obama is conjuring the antiwar fervor that animates his party\u2019s liberal base.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Obama criticized Republicans who are pressing forward with legislation to block the accord, which is on track for a vote in September. Opposition to the agreement, he said, stems from \u201cknee-jerk partisanship that has become all too familiar, rhetoric that renders every decision made to be a disaster, a surrender.\u201d He said hard-liners in Iran who chant \u201cDeath to America\u201d were \u201cmaking common cause with the Republican caucus.\u201d Lawmakers who oppose the deal said they were not persuaded, and some said they resented the president\u2019s tone . Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the majority leader, said the speech had done a disservice to lawmakers in both parties who \u201chave serious and heartfelt concerns.\u201d \u201cThese Democrats and Republicans deserved serious answers today, not some outrageous attempt to equate their search for answers with supporting chants of \u2018Death to America,\u2019 \u201d Mr. McConnell said, adding that Democrats who had declared their opposition would be \u201cespecially insulted\u201d by the president\u2019s remarks. \u201cThis goes way over the line of civil discourse,\u201d he said. In his speech, the president invoked the legacy of John F. Kennedy, who in 1963 appeared on the same campus to push for a nuclear test ban treaty with the Soviet Union. But in making his case, Mr. Obama was also returning to a theme that helped him rise to power. As a first-term senator, Mr. Obama gained political prominence in part because of his strong opposition to the war in Iraq. It helped him win the 2008 Democratic nomination \u2014 defeating Hillary Rodham Clinton, who backed the invasion and later became his secretary of state \u2014 and the presidency. Now, as a second-term president working to defend an ambitious diplomatic nonproliferation accord with Iran and protect his legacy, Mr. Obama is conjuring the antiwar fervor that animates his party\u2019s liberal base.", "sentence_answer": "Lawmakers who oppose the deal said they were not persuaded, and some said they resented the president\u2019s tone ."} +{"question": "What did Mr. Obama invoke during his speech?", "paragraph": "Mr. Obama criticized Republicans who are pressing forward with legislation to block the accord, which is on track for a vote in September. Opposition to the agreement, he said, stems from \u201cknee-jerk partisanship that has become all too familiar, rhetoric that renders every decision made to be a disaster, a surrender.\u201d He said hard-liners in Iran who chant \u201cDeath to America\u201d were \u201cmaking common cause with the Republican caucus.\u201d Lawmakers who oppose the deal said they were not persuaded, and some said they resented the president\u2019s tone. Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the majority leader, said the speech had done a disservice to lawmakers in both parties who \u201chave serious and heartfelt concerns.\u201d \u201cThese Democrats and Republicans deserved serious answers today, not some outrageous attempt to equate their search for answers with supporting chants of \u2018Death to America,\u2019 \u201d Mr. McConnell said, adding that Democrats who had declared their opposition would be \u201cespecially insulted\u201d by the president\u2019s remarks. \u201cThis goes way over the line of civil discourse,\u201d he said. In his speech, the president invoked the legacy of John F. Kennedy, who in 1963 appeared on the same campus to push for a nuclear test ban treaty with the Soviet Union. But in making his case, Mr. Obama was also returning to a theme that helped him rise to power. As a first-term senator, Mr. Obama gained political prominence in part because of his strong opposition to the war in Iraq. It helped him win the 2008 Democratic nomination \u2014 defeating Hillary Rodham Clinton, who backed the invasion and later became his secretary of state \u2014 and the presidency. Now, as a second-term president working to defend an ambitious diplomatic nonproliferation accord with Iran and protect his legacy, Mr. Obama is conjuring the antiwar fervor that animates his party\u2019s liberal base.", "answer": "the legacy of John F. Kennedy", "sentence": "In his speech, the president invoked the legacy of John F. Kennedy , who in 1963 appeared on the same campus to push for a nuclear test ban treaty with the Soviet Union.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Obama criticized Republicans who are pressing forward with legislation to block the accord, which is on track for a vote in September. Opposition to the agreement, he said, stems from \u201cknee-jerk partisanship that has become all too familiar, rhetoric that renders every decision made to be a disaster, a surrender.\u201d He said hard-liners in Iran who chant \u201cDeath to America\u201d were \u201cmaking common cause with the Republican caucus.\u201d Lawmakers who oppose the deal said they were not persuaded, and some said they resented the president\u2019s tone. Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the majority leader, said the speech had done a disservice to lawmakers in both parties who \u201chave serious and heartfelt concerns.\u201d \u201cThese Democrats and Republicans deserved serious answers today, not some outrageous attempt to equate their search for answers with supporting chants of \u2018Death to America,\u2019 \u201d Mr. McConnell said, adding that Democrats who had declared their opposition would be \u201cespecially insulted\u201d by the president\u2019s remarks. \u201cThis goes way over the line of civil discourse,\u201d he said. In his speech, the president invoked the legacy of John F. Kennedy , who in 1963 appeared on the same campus to push for a nuclear test ban treaty with the Soviet Union. But in making his case, Mr. Obama was also returning to a theme that helped him rise to power. As a first-term senator, Mr. Obama gained political prominence in part because of his strong opposition to the war in Iraq. It helped him win the 2008 Democratic nomination \u2014 defeating Hillary Rodham Clinton, who backed the invasion and later became his secretary of state \u2014 and the presidency. Now, as a second-term president working to defend an ambitious diplomatic nonproliferation accord with Iran and protect his legacy, Mr. Obama is conjuring the antiwar fervor that animates his party\u2019s liberal base.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Obama criticized Republicans who are pressing forward with legislation to block the accord, which is on track for a vote in September. Opposition to the agreement, he said, stems from \u201cknee-jerk partisanship that has become all too familiar, rhetoric that renders every decision made to be a disaster, a surrender.\u201d He said hard-liners in Iran who chant \u201cDeath to America\u201d were \u201cmaking common cause with the Republican caucus.\u201d Lawmakers who oppose the deal said they were not persuaded, and some said they resented the president\u2019s tone. Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the majority leader, said the speech had done a disservice to lawmakers in both parties who \u201chave serious and heartfelt concerns.\u201d \u201cThese Democrats and Republicans deserved serious answers today, not some outrageous attempt to equate their search for answers with supporting chants of \u2018Death to America,\u2019 \u201d Mr. McConnell said, adding that Democrats who had declared their opposition would be \u201cespecially insulted\u201d by the president\u2019s remarks. \u201cThis goes way over the line of civil discourse,\u201d he said. In his speech, the president invoked the legacy of John F. Kennedy , who in 1963 appeared on the same campus to push for a nuclear test ban treaty with the Soviet Union. But in making his case, Mr. Obama was also returning to a theme that helped him rise to power. As a first-term senator, Mr. Obama gained political prominence in part because of his strong opposition to the war in Iraq. It helped him win the 2008 Democratic nomination \u2014 defeating Hillary Rodham Clinton, who backed the invasion and later became his secretary of state \u2014 and the presidency. Now, as a second-term president working to defend an ambitious diplomatic nonproliferation accord with Iran and protect his legacy, Mr. Obama is conjuring the antiwar fervor that animates his party\u2019s liberal base.", "sentence_answer": "In his speech, the president invoked the legacy of John F. Kennedy , who in 1963 appeared on the same campus to push for a nuclear test ban treaty with the Soviet Union."} +{"question": "What kind of fervor was Mr. Obama conjuring with his speech?", "paragraph": "Mr. Obama criticized Republicans who are pressing forward with legislation to block the accord, which is on track for a vote in September. Opposition to the agreement, he said, stems from \u201cknee-jerk partisanship that has become all too familiar, rhetoric that renders every decision made to be a disaster, a surrender.\u201d He said hard-liners in Iran who chant \u201cDeath to America\u201d were \u201cmaking common cause with the Republican caucus.\u201d Lawmakers who oppose the deal said they were not persuaded, and some said they resented the president\u2019s tone. Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the majority leader, said the speech had done a disservice to lawmakers in both parties who \u201chave serious and heartfelt concerns.\u201d \u201cThese Democrats and Republicans deserved serious answers today, not some outrageous attempt to equate their search for answers with supporting chants of \u2018Death to America,\u2019 \u201d Mr. McConnell said, adding that Democrats who had declared their opposition would be \u201cespecially insulted\u201d by the president\u2019s remarks. \u201cThis goes way over the line of civil discourse,\u201d he said. In his speech, the president invoked the legacy of John F. Kennedy, who in 1963 appeared on the same campus to push for a nuclear test ban treaty with the Soviet Union. But in making his case, Mr. Obama was also returning to a theme that helped him rise to power. As a first-term senator, Mr. Obama gained political prominence in part because of his strong opposition to the war in Iraq. It helped him win the 2008 Democratic nomination \u2014 defeating Hillary Rodham Clinton, who backed the invasion and later became his secretary of state \u2014 and the presidency. Now, as a second-term president working to defend an ambitious diplomatic nonproliferation accord with Iran and protect his legacy, Mr. Obama is conjuring the antiwar fervor that animates his party\u2019s liberal base.", "answer": "antiwar fervor", "sentence": "Now, as a second-term president working to defend an ambitious diplomatic nonproliferation accord with Iran and protect his legacy, Mr. Obama is conjuring the antiwar fervor that animates his party\u2019s liberal base.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Obama criticized Republicans who are pressing forward with legislation to block the accord, which is on track for a vote in September. Opposition to the agreement, he said, stems from \u201cknee-jerk partisanship that has become all too familiar, rhetoric that renders every decision made to be a disaster, a surrender.\u201d He said hard-liners in Iran who chant \u201cDeath to America\u201d were \u201cmaking common cause with the Republican caucus.\u201d Lawmakers who oppose the deal said they were not persuaded, and some said they resented the president\u2019s tone. Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the majority leader, said the speech had done a disservice to lawmakers in both parties who \u201chave serious and heartfelt concerns.\u201d \u201cThese Democrats and Republicans deserved serious answers today, not some outrageous attempt to equate their search for answers with supporting chants of \u2018Death to America,\u2019 \u201d Mr. McConnell said, adding that Democrats who had declared their opposition would be \u201cespecially insulted\u201d by the president\u2019s remarks. \u201cThis goes way over the line of civil discourse,\u201d he said. In his speech, the president invoked the legacy of John F. Kennedy, who in 1963 appeared on the same campus to push for a nuclear test ban treaty with the Soviet Union. But in making his case, Mr. Obama was also returning to a theme that helped him rise to power. As a first-term senator, Mr. Obama gained political prominence in part because of his strong opposition to the war in Iraq. It helped him win the 2008 Democratic nomination \u2014 defeating Hillary Rodham Clinton, who backed the invasion and later became his secretary of state \u2014 and the presidency. Now, as a second-term president working to defend an ambitious diplomatic nonproliferation accord with Iran and protect his legacy, Mr. Obama is conjuring the antiwar fervor that animates his party\u2019s liberal base. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Obama criticized Republicans who are pressing forward with legislation to block the accord, which is on track for a vote in September. Opposition to the agreement, he said, stems from \u201cknee-jerk partisanship that has become all too familiar, rhetoric that renders every decision made to be a disaster, a surrender.\u201d He said hard-liners in Iran who chant \u201cDeath to America\u201d were \u201cmaking common cause with the Republican caucus.\u201d Lawmakers who oppose the deal said they were not persuaded, and some said they resented the president\u2019s tone. Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the majority leader, said the speech had done a disservice to lawmakers in both parties who \u201chave serious and heartfelt concerns.\u201d \u201cThese Democrats and Republicans deserved serious answers today, not some outrageous attempt to equate their search for answers with supporting chants of \u2018Death to America,\u2019 \u201d Mr. McConnell said, adding that Democrats who had declared their opposition would be \u201cespecially insulted\u201d by the president\u2019s remarks. \u201cThis goes way over the line of civil discourse,\u201d he said. In his speech, the president invoked the legacy of John F. Kennedy, who in 1963 appeared on the same campus to push for a nuclear test ban treaty with the Soviet Union. But in making his case, Mr. Obama was also returning to a theme that helped him rise to power. As a first-term senator, Mr. Obama gained political prominence in part because of his strong opposition to the war in Iraq. It helped him win the 2008 Democratic nomination \u2014 defeating Hillary Rodham Clinton, who backed the invasion and later became his secretary of state \u2014 and the presidency. Now, as a second-term president working to defend an ambitious diplomatic nonproliferation accord with Iran and protect his legacy, Mr. Obama is conjuring the antiwar fervor that animates his party\u2019s liberal base.", "sentence_answer": "Now, as a second-term president working to defend an ambitious diplomatic nonproliferation accord with Iran and protect his legacy, Mr. Obama is conjuring the antiwar fervor that animates his party\u2019s liberal base."} +{"question": "What did David Makovsky think Mr. Obama seem to be doing with his speech?", "paragraph": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents. \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "\u201chyping\u201d his case to the public", "sentence": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public , perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents.", "paragraph_sentence": " David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public , perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents. \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public , perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents. \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public , perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents."} +{"question": "Why did David Makovsky think Mr. Obama might have felt the need to hype his case to the public?", "paragraph": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents. \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents", "sentence": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents .", "paragraph_sentence": " David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents . \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents . \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents ."} +{"question": "What did Mr. Makovsky think would be the eventual outcome of the debate?", "paragraph": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents. \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff", "sentence": "\u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff ,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said.", "paragraph_sentence": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents. \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff ,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents. \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff ,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff ,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said."} +{"question": "What institute is David Makovsky a part of?", "paragraph": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents. \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "the Washington Institute for Near East Policy", "sentence": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents.", "paragraph_sentence": " David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents. \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents. \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents."} +{"question": "What did David Makovsky think Mr. Obama seem to be doing with his speech?", "paragraph": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents. \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "\u201chyping\u201d his case to the public", "sentence": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public , perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents.", "paragraph_sentence": " David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public , perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents. \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public , perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents. \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public , perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents."} +{"question": "What did Mr. Makovsky think would be the eventual outcome of the debate?", "paragraph": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents. \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff", "sentence": "\u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff ,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said.", "paragraph_sentence": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents. \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff ,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents. \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff ,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff ,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said."} +{"question": "Why did David Makovsky think Mr. Obama might have felt the need to hype his case to the public?", "paragraph": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents. \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents", "sentence": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents .", "paragraph_sentence": " David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents . \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents . \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents ."} +{"question": "What institute is David Makovsky a part of?", "paragraph": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents. \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "the Washington Institute for Near East Policy", "sentence": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents.", "paragraph_sentence": " David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents. \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents. \u201cThese two sides are just playing off each other, and they\u2019re just going to drive this debate off a cliff,\u201d Mr. Makovsky said. \u201cYou come to expect a certain high road in political persuasion from this president, and if he feels that the critics are being unfair, call them on that, but don\u2019t say, \u2018I see your low road, and I\u2019m going to double it.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "David Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said that even though the White House had been effective at privately engaging skeptics of the deal on its merits, Mr. Obama appeared to be \u201chyping\u201d his case to the public, perhaps in an effort to match the incendiary language of his opponents."} +{"question": "Where was Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi killed?", "paragraph": "FRONT PAGE Because of an editing error, an article on Nov. 29 about the Islamic State\u2019s control of the Libyan city of Surt, which Western agencies say may give it a fallback option in case it is ousted from its territories in Iraq and Syria, misstated the location of the city of Darnah, close to where Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi, an Iraqi leader of the Islamic State, was killed by an American airstrike in November. Darnah is in eastern Libya, not Syria. \u2022 An article on Nov. 30 about the potential discovery of the long-sought burial chamber of Queen Nefertiti, which would boost Egypt\u2019s struggling tourism industry, quoted incorrectly from the paper \u201cThe Burial of Nefertiti?\u201d by Nicholas Reeves, a noted Egyptologist. The paper referred to an \u201cearlier royal interment,\u201d not \u201cinternment.\u201d \u2022 An article on Friday about compensation for the Americans taken hostage at the United States Embassy in Tehran in 1979 misidentified, in some editions, the party affiliation of Gerald E. Connolly of Virginia, who promoted legislation for years to compensate the Americans. He is a Democrat, not a Republican. INTERNATIONAL Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 13 about the first elections in Saudi Arabia to include women as voters and candidates misstated the number of Saudi citizens in some editions. There are roughly 20 million, not 28 million. \u2022", "answer": "Iraqi leader of the Islamic State", "sentence": "FRONT PAGE Because of an editing error, an article on Nov. 29 about the Islamic State\u2019s control of the Libyan city of Surt, which Western agencies say may give it a fallback option in case it is ousted from its territories in Iraq and Syria, misstated the location of the city of Darnah, close to where Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi, an Iraqi leader of the Islamic State , was killed by an American airstrike in November.", "paragraph_sentence": " FRONT PAGE Because of an editing error, an article on Nov. 29 about the Islamic State\u2019s control of the Libyan city of Surt, which Western agencies say may give it a fallback option in case it is ousted from its territories in Iraq and Syria, misstated the location of the city of Darnah, close to where Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi, an Iraqi leader of the Islamic State , was killed by an American airstrike in November. Darnah is in eastern Libya, not Syria. \u2022 An article on Nov. 30 about the potential discovery of the long-sought burial chamber of Queen Nefertiti, which would boost Egypt\u2019s struggling tourism industry, quoted incorrectly from the paper \u201cThe Burial of Nefertiti?\u201d by Nicholas Reeves, a noted Egyptologist. The paper referred to an \u201cearlier royal interment,\u201d not \u201cinternment.\u201d \u2022 An article on Friday about compensation for the Americans taken hostage at the United States Embassy in Tehran in 1979 misidentified, in some editions, the party affiliation of Gerald E. Connolly of Virginia, who promoted legislation for years to compensate the Americans. He is a Democrat, not a Republican. INTERNATIONAL Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 13 about the first elections in Saudi Arabia to include women as voters and candidates misstated the number of Saudi citizens in some editions. There are roughly 20 million, not 28 million. \u2022", "paragraph_answer": "FRONT PAGE Because of an editing error, an article on Nov. 29 about the Islamic State\u2019s control of the Libyan city of Surt, which Western agencies say may give it a fallback option in case it is ousted from its territories in Iraq and Syria, misstated the location of the city of Darnah, close to where Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi, an Iraqi leader of the Islamic State , was killed by an American airstrike in November. Darnah is in eastern Libya, not Syria. \u2022 An article on Nov. 30 about the potential discovery of the long-sought burial chamber of Queen Nefertiti, which would boost Egypt\u2019s struggling tourism industry, quoted incorrectly from the paper \u201cThe Burial of Nefertiti?\u201d by Nicholas Reeves, a noted Egyptologist. The paper referred to an \u201cearlier royal interment,\u201d not \u201cinternment.\u201d \u2022 An article on Friday about compensation for the Americans taken hostage at the United States Embassy in Tehran in 1979 misidentified, in some editions, the party affiliation of Gerald E. Connolly of Virginia, who promoted legislation for years to compensate the Americans. He is a Democrat, not a Republican. INTERNATIONAL Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 13 about the first elections in Saudi Arabia to include women as voters and candidates misstated the number of Saudi citizens in some editions. There are roughly 20 million, not 28 million. \u2022", "sentence_answer": "FRONT PAGE Because of an editing error, an article on Nov. 29 about the Islamic State\u2019s control of the Libyan city of Surt, which Western agencies say may give it a fallback option in case it is ousted from its territories in Iraq and Syria, misstated the location of the city of Darnah, close to where Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi, an Iraqi leader of the Islamic State , was killed by an American airstrike in November."} +{"question": "Who was Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi?", "paragraph": "FRONT PAGE Because of an editing error, an article on Nov. 29 about the Islamic State\u2019s control of the Libyan city of Surt, which Western agencies say may give it a fallback option in case it is ousted from its territories in Iraq and Syria, misstated the location of the city of Darnah, close to where Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi, an Iraqi leader of the Islamic State, was killed by an American airstrike in November. Darnah is in eastern Libya, not Syria. \u2022 An article on Nov. 30 about the potential discovery of the long-sought burial chamber of Queen Nefertiti, which would boost Egypt\u2019s struggling tourism industry, quoted incorrectly from the paper \u201cThe Burial of Nefertiti?\u201d by Nicholas Reeves, a noted Egyptologist. The paper referred to an \u201cearlier royal interment,\u201d not \u201cinternment.\u201d \u2022 An article on Friday about compensation for the Americans taken hostage at the United States Embassy in Tehran in 1979 misidentified, in some editions, the party affiliation of Gerald E. Connolly of Virginia, who promoted legislation for years to compensate the Americans. He is a Democrat, not a Republican. INTERNATIONAL Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 13 about the first elections in Saudi Arabia to include women as voters and candidates misstated the number of Saudi citizens in some editions. There are roughly 20 million, not 28 million. \u2022", "answer": "Iraqi leader of the Islamic State", "sentence": "FRONT PAGE Because of an editing error, an article on Nov. 29 about the Islamic State\u2019s control of the Libyan city of Surt, which Western agencies say may give it a fallback option in case it is ousted from its territories in Iraq and Syria, misstated the location of the city of Darnah, close to where Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi, an Iraqi leader of the Islamic State , was killed by an American airstrike in November.", "paragraph_sentence": " FRONT PAGE Because of an editing error, an article on Nov. 29 about the Islamic State\u2019s control of the Libyan city of Surt, which Western agencies say may give it a fallback option in case it is ousted from its territories in Iraq and Syria, misstated the location of the city of Darnah, close to where Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi, an Iraqi leader of the Islamic State , was killed by an American airstrike in November. Darnah is in eastern Libya, not Syria. \u2022 An article on Nov. 30 about the potential discovery of the long-sought burial chamber of Queen Nefertiti, which would boost Egypt\u2019s struggling tourism industry, quoted incorrectly from the paper \u201cThe Burial of Nefertiti?\u201d by Nicholas Reeves, a noted Egyptologist. The paper referred to an \u201cearlier royal interment,\u201d not \u201cinternment.\u201d \u2022 An article on Friday about compensation for the Americans taken hostage at the United States Embassy in Tehran in 1979 misidentified, in some editions, the party affiliation of Gerald E. Connolly of Virginia, who promoted legislation for years to compensate the Americans. He is a Democrat, not a Republican. INTERNATIONAL Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 13 about the first elections in Saudi Arabia to include women as voters and candidates misstated the number of Saudi citizens in some editions. There are roughly 20 million, not 28 million. \u2022", "paragraph_answer": "FRONT PAGE Because of an editing error, an article on Nov. 29 about the Islamic State\u2019s control of the Libyan city of Surt, which Western agencies say may give it a fallback option in case it is ousted from its territories in Iraq and Syria, misstated the location of the city of Darnah, close to where Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi, an Iraqi leader of the Islamic State , was killed by an American airstrike in November. Darnah is in eastern Libya, not Syria. \u2022 An article on Nov. 30 about the potential discovery of the long-sought burial chamber of Queen Nefertiti, which would boost Egypt\u2019s struggling tourism industry, quoted incorrectly from the paper \u201cThe Burial of Nefertiti?\u201d by Nicholas Reeves, a noted Egyptologist. The paper referred to an \u201cearlier royal interment,\u201d not \u201cinternment.\u201d \u2022 An article on Friday about compensation for the Americans taken hostage at the United States Embassy in Tehran in 1979 misidentified, in some editions, the party affiliation of Gerald E. Connolly of Virginia, who promoted legislation for years to compensate the Americans. He is a Democrat, not a Republican. INTERNATIONAL Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 13 about the first elections in Saudi Arabia to include women as voters and candidates misstated the number of Saudi citizens in some editions. There are roughly 20 million, not 28 million. \u2022", "sentence_answer": "FRONT PAGE Because of an editing error, an article on Nov. 29 about the Islamic State\u2019s control of the Libyan city of Surt, which Western agencies say may give it a fallback option in case it is ousted from its territories in Iraq and Syria, misstated the location of the city of Darnah, close to where Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi, an Iraqi leader of the Islamic State , was killed by an American airstrike in November."} +{"question": "What country is Darnah in?", "paragraph": "FRONT PAGE Because of an editing error, an article on Nov. 29 about the Islamic State\u2019s control of the Libyan city of Surt, which Western agencies say may give it a fallback option in case it is ousted from its territories in Iraq and Syria, misstated the location of the city of Darnah, close to where Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi, an Iraqi leader of the Islamic State, was killed by an American airstrike in November. Darnah is in eastern Libya, not Syria. \u2022 An article on Nov. 30 about the potential discovery of the long-sought burial chamber of Queen Nefertiti, which would boost Egypt\u2019s struggling tourism industry, quoted incorrectly from the paper \u201cThe Burial of Nefertiti?\u201d by Nicholas Reeves, a noted Egyptologist. The paper referred to an \u201cearlier royal interment,\u201d not \u201cinternment.\u201d \u2022 An article on Friday about compensation for the Americans taken hostage at the United States Embassy in Tehran in 1979 misidentified, in some editions, the party affiliation of Gerald E. Connolly of Virginia, who promoted legislation for years to compensate the Americans. He is a Democrat, not a Republican. INTERNATIONAL Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 13 about the first elections in Saudi Arabia to include women as voters and candidates misstated the number of Saudi citizens in some editions. There are roughly 20 million, not 28 million. \u2022", "answer": "Libya", "sentence": "FRONT PAGE Because of an editing error, an article on Nov. 29 about the Islamic State\u2019s control of the Libya n city of Surt, which Western agencies say may give it a fallback option in case it is ousted from its territories in Iraq and Syria, misstated the location of the city of Darnah, close to where Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi, an Iraqi leader of the Islamic State, was killed by an American airstrike in November.", "paragraph_sentence": " FRONT PAGE Because of an editing error, an article on Nov. 29 about the Islamic State\u2019s control of the Libya n city of Surt, which Western agencies say may give it a fallback option in case it is ousted from its territories in Iraq and Syria, misstated the location of the city of Darnah, close to where Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi, an Iraqi leader of the Islamic State, was killed by an American airstrike in November. Darnah is in eastern Libya, not Syria. \u2022 An article on Nov. 30 about the potential discovery of the long-sought burial chamber of Queen Nefertiti, which would boost Egypt\u2019s struggling tourism industry, quoted incorrectly from the paper \u201cThe Burial of Nefertiti?\u201d by Nicholas Reeves, a noted Egyptologist. The paper referred to an \u201cearlier royal interment,\u201d not \u201cinternment.\u201d \u2022 An article on Friday about compensation for the Americans taken hostage at the United States Embassy in Tehran in 1979 misidentified, in some editions, the party affiliation of Gerald E. Connolly of Virginia, who promoted legislation for years to compensate the Americans. He is a Democrat, not a Republican. INTERNATIONAL Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 13 about the first elections in Saudi Arabia to include women as voters and candidates misstated the number of Saudi citizens in some editions. There are roughly 20 million, not 28 million. \u2022", "paragraph_answer": "FRONT PAGE Because of an editing error, an article on Nov. 29 about the Islamic State\u2019s control of the Libya n city of Surt, which Western agencies say may give it a fallback option in case it is ousted from its territories in Iraq and Syria, misstated the location of the city of Darnah, close to where Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi, an Iraqi leader of the Islamic State, was killed by an American airstrike in November. Darnah is in eastern Libya, not Syria. \u2022 An article on Nov. 30 about the potential discovery of the long-sought burial chamber of Queen Nefertiti, which would boost Egypt\u2019s struggling tourism industry, quoted incorrectly from the paper \u201cThe Burial of Nefertiti?\u201d by Nicholas Reeves, a noted Egyptologist. The paper referred to an \u201cearlier royal interment,\u201d not \u201cinternment.\u201d \u2022 An article on Friday about compensation for the Americans taken hostage at the United States Embassy in Tehran in 1979 misidentified, in some editions, the party affiliation of Gerald E. Connolly of Virginia, who promoted legislation for years to compensate the Americans. He is a Democrat, not a Republican. INTERNATIONAL Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 13 about the first elections in Saudi Arabia to include women as voters and candidates misstated the number of Saudi citizens in some editions. There are roughly 20 million, not 28 million. \u2022", "sentence_answer": "FRONT PAGE Because of an editing error, an article on Nov. 29 about the Islamic State\u2019s control of the Libya n city of Surt, which Western agencies say may give it a fallback option in case it is ousted from its territories in Iraq and Syria, misstated the location of the city of Darnah, close to where Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi, an Iraqi leader of the Islamic State, was killed by an American airstrike in November."} +{"question": "The discover of whose burial chamber would lift Egypt's tourism industry?", "paragraph": "FRONT PAGE Because of an editing error, an article on Nov. 29 about the Islamic State\u2019s control of the Libyan city of Surt, which Western agencies say may give it a fallback option in case it is ousted from its territories in Iraq and Syria, misstated the location of the city of Darnah, close to where Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi, an Iraqi leader of the Islamic State, was killed by an American airstrike in November. Darnah is in eastern Libya, not Syria. \u2022 An article on Nov. 30 about the potential discovery of the long-sought burial chamber of Queen Nefertiti, which would boost Egypt\u2019s struggling tourism industry, quoted incorrectly from the paper \u201cThe Burial of Nefertiti?\u201d by Nicholas Reeves, a noted Egyptologist. The paper referred to an \u201cearlier royal interment,\u201d not \u201cinternment.\u201d \u2022 An article on Friday about compensation for the Americans taken hostage at the United States Embassy in Tehran in 1979 misidentified, in some editions, the party affiliation of Gerald E. Connolly of Virginia, who promoted legislation for years to compensate the Americans. He is a Democrat, not a Republican. INTERNATIONAL Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 13 about the first elections in Saudi Arabia to include women as voters and candidates misstated the number of Saudi citizens in some editions. There are roughly 20 million, not 28 million. \u2022", "answer": "Queen Nefertiti", "sentence": "An article on Nov. 30 about the potential discovery of the long-sought burial chamber of Queen Nefertiti , which would boost Egypt\u2019s struggling tourism industry, quoted incorrectly from the paper \u201cThe Burial of Nefertiti?\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "FRONT PAGE Because of an editing error, an article on Nov. 29 about the Islamic State\u2019s control of the Libyan city of Surt, which Western agencies say may give it a fallback option in case it is ousted from its territories in Iraq and Syria, misstated the location of the city of Darnah, close to where Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi, an Iraqi leader of the Islamic State, was killed by an American airstrike in November. Darnah is in eastern Libya, not Syria. \u2022 An article on Nov. 30 about the potential discovery of the long-sought burial chamber of Queen Nefertiti , which would boost Egypt\u2019s struggling tourism industry, quoted incorrectly from the paper \u201cThe Burial of Nefertiti?\u201d by Nicholas Reeves, a noted Egyptologist. The paper referred to an \u201cearlier royal interment,\u201d not \u201cinternment.\u201d \u2022 An article on Friday about compensation for the Americans taken hostage at the United States Embassy in Tehran in 1979 misidentified, in some editions, the party affiliation of Gerald E. Connolly of Virginia, who promoted legislation for years to compensate the Americans. He is a Democrat, not a Republican. INTERNATIONAL Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 13 about the first elections in Saudi Arabia to include women as voters and candidates misstated the number of Saudi citizens in some editions. There are roughly 20 million, not 28 million. \u2022", "paragraph_answer": "FRONT PAGE Because of an editing error, an article on Nov. 29 about the Islamic State\u2019s control of the Libyan city of Surt, which Western agencies say may give it a fallback option in case it is ousted from its territories in Iraq and Syria, misstated the location of the city of Darnah, close to where Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi, an Iraqi leader of the Islamic State, was killed by an American airstrike in November. Darnah is in eastern Libya, not Syria. \u2022 An article on Nov. 30 about the potential discovery of the long-sought burial chamber of Queen Nefertiti , which would boost Egypt\u2019s struggling tourism industry, quoted incorrectly from the paper \u201cThe Burial of Nefertiti?\u201d by Nicholas Reeves, a noted Egyptologist. The paper referred to an \u201cearlier royal interment,\u201d not \u201cinternment.\u201d \u2022 An article on Friday about compensation for the Americans taken hostage at the United States Embassy in Tehran in 1979 misidentified, in some editions, the party affiliation of Gerald E. Connolly of Virginia, who promoted legislation for years to compensate the Americans. He is a Democrat, not a Republican. INTERNATIONAL Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 13 about the first elections in Saudi Arabia to include women as voters and candidates misstated the number of Saudi citizens in some editions. There are roughly 20 million, not 28 million. \u2022", "sentence_answer": "An article on Nov. 30 about the potential discovery of the long-sought burial chamber of Queen Nefertiti , which would boost Egypt\u2019s struggling tourism industry, quoted incorrectly from the paper \u201cThe Burial of Nefertiti?\u201d"} +{"question": "How much is a seat on Virgin Galactic?", "paragraph": "Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat. The crash was last year, not in July. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-844-NYT-NEWS (1-844-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622. Readers dissatisfied with a response or concerned about the paper\u2019s journalistic integrity may reach the public editor at public@nytimes.com or (212) 556-7652.", "answer": "$200,000", "sentence": "Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat.", "paragraph_sentence": " Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat. The crash was last year, not in July. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-844-NYT-NEWS (1-844-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622. Readers dissatisfied with a response or concerned about the paper\u2019s journalistic integrity may reach the public editor at public@nytimes.com or (212) 556-7652.", "paragraph_answer": "Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat. The crash was last year, not in July. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-844-NYT-NEWS (1-844-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622. Readers dissatisfied with a response or concerned about the paper\u2019s journalistic integrity may reach the public editor at public@nytimes.com or (212) 556-7652.", "sentence_answer": "Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat."} +{"question": "What is Virgin Galactic?", "paragraph": "Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat. The crash was last year, not in July. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-844-NYT-NEWS (1-844-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622. Readers dissatisfied with a response or concerned about the paper\u2019s journalistic integrity may reach the public editor at public@nytimes.com or (212) 556-7652.", "answer": "Spaniard", "sentence": "Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat.", "paragraph_sentence": " Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat. The crash was last year, not in July. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-844-NYT-NEWS (1-844-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622. Readers dissatisfied with a response or concerned about the paper\u2019s journalistic integrity may reach the public editor at public@nytimes.com or (212) 556-7652.", "paragraph_answer": "Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat. The crash was last year, not in July. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-844-NYT-NEWS (1-844-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622. Readers dissatisfied with a response or concerned about the paper\u2019s journalistic integrity may reach the public editor at public@nytimes.com or (212) 556-7652.", "sentence_answer": "Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat."} +{"question": "What nationality is Xavier Gabriel?", "paragraph": "Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat. The crash was last year, not in July. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-844-NYT-NEWS (1-844-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622. Readers dissatisfied with a response or concerned about the paper\u2019s journalistic integrity may reach the public editor at public@nytimes.com or (212) 556-7652.", "answer": "Spaniard", "sentence": "Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat.", "paragraph_sentence": " Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat. The crash was last year, not in July. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-844-NYT-NEWS (1-844-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622. Readers dissatisfied with a response or concerned about the paper\u2019s journalistic integrity may reach the public editor at public@nytimes.com or (212) 556-7652.", "paragraph_answer": "Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat. The crash was last year, not in July. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-844-NYT-NEWS (1-844-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622. Readers dissatisfied with a response or concerned about the paper\u2019s journalistic integrity may reach the public editor at public@nytimes.com or (212) 556-7652.", "sentence_answer": "Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat."} +{"question": "What is Xavier Gabriel's business?", "paragraph": "Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat. The crash was last year, not in July. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-844-NYT-NEWS (1-844-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622. Readers dissatisfied with a response or concerned about the paper\u2019s journalistic integrity may reach the public editor at public@nytimes.com or (212) 556-7652.", "answer": "lottery", "sentence": "Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat.", "paragraph_sentence": " Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat. The crash was last year, not in July. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-844-NYT-NEWS (1-844-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622. Readers dissatisfied with a response or concerned about the paper\u2019s journalistic integrity may reach the public editor at public@nytimes.com or (212) 556-7652.", "paragraph_answer": "Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat. The crash was last year, not in July. The Times welcomes comments and suggestions, or complaints about errors that warrant correction. Messages on news coverage can be e-mailed to nytnews@nytimes.com or left toll-free at 1-844-NYT-NEWS (1-844-698-6397). Comments on editorials may be e-mailed to letters@nytimes.com or faxed to (212) 556-3622. Readers dissatisfied with a response or concerned about the paper\u2019s journalistic integrity may reach the public editor at public@nytimes.com or (212) 556-7652.", "sentence_answer": "Because of an editing error, an article on Dec. 20 about Xavier Gabriel, a Spaniard whose lottery business has become a national emblem of luck and a formidable merchandising brand, misstated, in some editions, the timing of the crash of the Virgin Galactic space plane, on which Mr. Gabriel has booked a $200,000 seat."} +{"question": "What was the most difficult decision that I decided to make?", "paragraph": "The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working. Before, there were silos with specialists working solo \u2014 a big network of people working independently. But I was convinced we needed to change. When you create something for the long term, you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term. To my surprise, people really followed the vision and we didn\u2019t have the slowdown that we had anticipated. Now I want to build on the momentum. The industry will continue to change, so we need to stay agile and adapt. I don\u2019t know what the future will be, but I know I want us to stay the most forward-thinking agency. That means constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted. Nothing lasts forever and our group is the prime example. It has changed many times, depending on the economic environment. Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain. Q. Do you miss being an entrepreneur?", "answer": "change the way the group was working", "sentence": "The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working .", "paragraph_sentence": " The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working . Before, there were silos with specialists working solo \u2014 a big network of people working independently. But I was convinced we needed to change. When you create something for the long term, you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term. To my surprise, people really followed the vision and we didn\u2019t have the slowdown that we had anticipated. Now I want to build on the momentum. The industry will continue to change, so we need to stay agile and adapt. I don\u2019t know what the future will be, but I know I want us to stay the most forward-thinking agency. That means constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted. Nothing lasts forever and our group is the prime example. It has changed many times, depending on the economic environment. Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain. Q. Do you miss being an entrepreneur?", "paragraph_answer": "The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working . Before, there were silos with specialists working solo \u2014 a big network of people working independently. But I was convinced we needed to change. When you create something for the long term, you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term. To my surprise, people really followed the vision and we didn\u2019t have the slowdown that we had anticipated. Now I want to build on the momentum. The industry will continue to change, so we need to stay agile and adapt. I don\u2019t know what the future will be, but I know I want us to stay the most forward-thinking agency. That means constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted. Nothing lasts forever and our group is the prime example. It has changed many times, depending on the economic environment. Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain. Q. Do you miss being an entrepreneur?", "sentence_answer": "The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working ."} +{"question": "When creating something for long term change, what can you expect?", "paragraph": "The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working. Before, there were silos with specialists working solo \u2014 a big network of people working independently. But I was convinced we needed to change. When you create something for the long term, you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term. To my surprise, people really followed the vision and we didn\u2019t have the slowdown that we had anticipated. Now I want to build on the momentum. The industry will continue to change, so we need to stay agile and adapt. I don\u2019t know what the future will be, but I know I want us to stay the most forward-thinking agency. That means constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted. Nothing lasts forever and our group is the prime example. It has changed many times, depending on the economic environment. Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain. Q. Do you miss being an entrepreneur?", "answer": "you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term", "sentence": "When you create something for the long term, you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term .", "paragraph_sentence": "The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working. Before, there were silos with specialists working solo \u2014 a big network of people working independently. But I was convinced we needed to change. When you create something for the long term, you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term . To my surprise, people really followed the vision and we didn\u2019t have the slowdown that we had anticipated. Now I want to build on the momentum. The industry will continue to change, so we need to stay agile and adapt. I don\u2019t know what the future will be, but I know I want us to stay the most forward-thinking agency. That means constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted. Nothing lasts forever and our group is the prime example. It has changed many times, depending on the economic environment. Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain. Q. Do you miss being an entrepreneur?", "paragraph_answer": "The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working. Before, there were silos with specialists working solo \u2014 a big network of people working independently. But I was convinced we needed to change. When you create something for the long term, you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term . To my surprise, people really followed the vision and we didn\u2019t have the slowdown that we had anticipated. Now I want to build on the momentum. The industry will continue to change, so we need to stay agile and adapt. I don\u2019t know what the future will be, but I know I want us to stay the most forward-thinking agency. That means constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted. Nothing lasts forever and our group is the prime example. It has changed many times, depending on the economic environment. Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain. Q. Do you miss being an entrepreneur?", "sentence_answer": "When you create something for the long term, you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term ."} +{"question": "As the industry continue to change, what do we need to do?", "paragraph": "The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working. Before, there were silos with specialists working solo \u2014 a big network of people working independently. But I was convinced we needed to change. When you create something for the long term, you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term. To my surprise, people really followed the vision and we didn\u2019t have the slowdown that we had anticipated. Now I want to build on the momentum. The industry will continue to change, so we need to stay agile and adapt. I don\u2019t know what the future will be, but I know I want us to stay the most forward-thinking agency. That means constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted. Nothing lasts forever and our group is the prime example. It has changed many times, depending on the economic environment. Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain. Q. Do you miss being an entrepreneur?", "answer": "we need to stay agile and adapt", "sentence": "The industry will continue to change, so we need to stay agile and adapt .", "paragraph_sentence": "The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working. Before, there were silos with specialists working solo \u2014 a big network of people working independently. But I was convinced we needed to change. When you create something for the long term, you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term. To my surprise, people really followed the vision and we didn\u2019t have the slowdown that we had anticipated. Now I want to build on the momentum. The industry will continue to change, so we need to stay agile and adapt . I don\u2019t know what the future will be, but I know I want us to stay the most forward-thinking agency. That means constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted. Nothing lasts forever and our group is the prime example. It has changed many times, depending on the economic environment. Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain. Q. Do you miss being an entrepreneur?", "paragraph_answer": "The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working. Before, there were silos with specialists working solo \u2014 a big network of people working independently. But I was convinced we needed to change. When you create something for the long term, you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term. To my surprise, people really followed the vision and we didn\u2019t have the slowdown that we had anticipated. Now I want to build on the momentum. The industry will continue to change, so we need to stay agile and adapt . I don\u2019t know what the future will be, but I know I want us to stay the most forward-thinking agency. That means constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted. Nothing lasts forever and our group is the prime example. It has changed many times, depending on the economic environment. Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain. Q. Do you miss being an entrepreneur?", "sentence_answer": "The industry will continue to change, so we need to stay agile and adapt ."} +{"question": "What does it mean to be constantly reassessing?", "paragraph": "The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working. Before, there were silos with specialists working solo \u2014 a big network of people working independently. But I was convinced we needed to change. When you create something for the long term, you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term. To my surprise, people really followed the vision and we didn\u2019t have the slowdown that we had anticipated. Now I want to build on the momentum. The industry will continue to change, so we need to stay agile and adapt. I don\u2019t know what the future will be, but I know I want us to stay the most forward-thinking agency. That means constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted. Nothing lasts forever and our group is the prime example. It has changed many times, depending on the economic environment. Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain. Q. Do you miss being an entrepreneur?", "answer": "constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted", "sentence": "That means constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted .", "paragraph_sentence": "The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working. Before, there were silos with specialists working solo \u2014 a big network of people working independently. But I was convinced we needed to change. When you create something for the long term, you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term. To my surprise, people really followed the vision and we didn\u2019t have the slowdown that we had anticipated. Now I want to build on the momentum. The industry will continue to change, so we need to stay agile and adapt. I don\u2019t know what the future will be, but I know I want us to stay the most forward-thinking agency. That means constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted . Nothing lasts forever and our group is the prime example. It has changed many times, depending on the economic environment. Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain. Q. Do you miss being an entrepreneur?", "paragraph_answer": "The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working. Before, there were silos with specialists working solo \u2014 a big network of people working independently. But I was convinced we needed to change. When you create something for the long term, you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term. To my surprise, people really followed the vision and we didn\u2019t have the slowdown that we had anticipated. Now I want to build on the momentum. The industry will continue to change, so we need to stay agile and adapt. I don\u2019t know what the future will be, but I know I want us to stay the most forward-thinking agency. That means constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted . Nothing lasts forever and our group is the prime example. It has changed many times, depending on the economic environment. Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain. Q. Do you miss being an entrepreneur?", "sentence_answer": "That means constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted ."} +{"question": "What is one prime example of nothing lasts forever?", "paragraph": "The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working. Before, there were silos with specialists working solo \u2014 a big network of people working independently. But I was convinced we needed to change. When you create something for the long term, you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term. To my surprise, people really followed the vision and we didn\u2019t have the slowdown that we had anticipated. Now I want to build on the momentum. The industry will continue to change, so we need to stay agile and adapt. I don\u2019t know what the future will be, but I know I want us to stay the most forward-thinking agency. That means constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted. Nothing lasts forever and our group is the prime example. It has changed many times, depending on the economic environment. Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain. Q. Do you miss being an entrepreneur?", "answer": "Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain", "sentence": "Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain .", "paragraph_sentence": "The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working. Before, there were silos with specialists working solo \u2014 a big network of people working independently. But I was convinced we needed to change. When you create something for the long term, you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term. To my surprise, people really followed the vision and we didn\u2019t have the slowdown that we had anticipated. Now I want to build on the momentum. The industry will continue to change, so we need to stay agile and adapt. I don\u2019t know what the future will be, but I know I want us to stay the most forward-thinking agency. That means constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted. Nothing lasts forever and our group is the prime example. It has changed many times, depending on the economic environment. Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain . Q. Do you miss being an entrepreneur?", "paragraph_answer": "The most difficult decision was when I decided to change the way the group was working. Before, there were silos with specialists working solo \u2014 a big network of people working independently. But I was convinced we needed to change. When you create something for the long term, you have to accept that you may have some collateral damage in the short term. To my surprise, people really followed the vision and we didn\u2019t have the slowdown that we had anticipated. Now I want to build on the momentum. The industry will continue to change, so we need to stay agile and adapt. I don\u2019t know what the future will be, but I know I want us to stay the most forward-thinking agency. That means constantly reassessing, never taking anything for granted. Nothing lasts forever and our group is the prime example. It has changed many times, depending on the economic environment. Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain . Q. Do you miss being an entrepreneur?", "sentence_answer": " Dinosaurs no longer exist, and they were at the top of the food chain ."} +{"question": "Whatcountry is the Pentagon criticizing?", "paragraph": "In another example of the Pentagon\u2019s growing criticism of China\u2019s efforts, a senior Navy commander, Rear Adm. Christopher J. Paul, said last month in Australia that there were countries \u201cwho attempt to constrict movement through international waters, who create land areas where there were none; who create exclusion zones where there should be shared use.\u201d In response, he said, the Navy is creating \u201chunter-killer surface action groups\u201d of ships. He suggested that Australia, one of America\u2019s top allies, would be invited to contribute to the new efforts in offensive naval warfare.", "answer": "China", "sentence": "In another example of the Pentagon\u2019s growing criticism of China \u2019s efforts, a senior Navy commander, Rear Adm. Christopher J. Paul, said last month in Australia that there were countries \u201cwho attempt to constrict movement through international waters, who create land areas where there were none; who create exclusion zones where there should be shared use.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " In another example of the Pentagon\u2019s growing criticism of China \u2019s efforts, a senior Navy commander, Rear Adm. Christopher J. Paul, said last month in Australia that there were countries \u201cwho attempt to constrict movement through international waters, who create land areas where there were none; who create exclusion zones where there should be shared use.\u201d In response, he said, the Navy is creating \u201chunter-killer surface action groups\u201d of ships. He suggested that Australia, one of America\u2019s top allies, would be invited to contribute to the new efforts in offensive naval warfare.", "paragraph_answer": "In another example of the Pentagon\u2019s growing criticism of China \u2019s efforts, a senior Navy commander, Rear Adm. Christopher J. Paul, said last month in Australia that there were countries \u201cwho attempt to constrict movement through international waters, who create land areas where there were none; who create exclusion zones where there should be shared use.\u201d In response, he said, the Navy is creating \u201chunter-killer surface action groups\u201d of ships. He suggested that Australia, one of America\u2019s top allies, would be invited to contribute to the new efforts in offensive naval warfare.", "sentence_answer": "In another example of the Pentagon\u2019s growing criticism of China \u2019s efforts, a senior Navy commander, Rear Adm. Christopher J. Paul, said last month in Australia that there were countries \u201cwho attempt to constrict movement through international waters, who create land areas where there were none; who create exclusion zones where there should be shared use.\u201d"} +{"question": "According to Admiral Paul China is attempting to constrict movement through what?", "paragraph": "In another example of the Pentagon\u2019s growing criticism of China\u2019s efforts, a senior Navy commander, Rear Adm. Christopher J. Paul, said last month in Australia that there were countries \u201cwho attempt to constrict movement through international waters, who create land areas where there were none; who create exclusion zones where there should be shared use.\u201d In response, he said, the Navy is creating \u201chunter-killer surface action groups\u201d of ships. He suggested that Australia, one of America\u2019s top allies, would be invited to contribute to the new efforts in offensive naval warfare.", "answer": "international waters", "sentence": "In another example of the Pentagon\u2019s growing criticism of China\u2019s efforts, a senior Navy commander, Rear Adm. Christopher J. Paul, said last month in Australia that there were countries \u201cwho attempt to constrict movement through international waters , who create land areas where there were none; who create exclusion zones where there should be shared use.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " In another example of the Pentagon\u2019s growing criticism of China\u2019s efforts, a senior Navy commander, Rear Adm. Christopher J. Paul, said last month in Australia that there were countries \u201cwho attempt to constrict movement through international waters , who create land areas where there were none; who create exclusion zones where there should be shared use.\u201d In response, he said, the Navy is creating \u201chunter-killer surface action groups\u201d of ships. He suggested that Australia, one of America\u2019s top allies, would be invited to contribute to the new efforts in offensive naval warfare.", "paragraph_answer": "In another example of the Pentagon\u2019s growing criticism of China\u2019s efforts, a senior Navy commander, Rear Adm. Christopher J. Paul, said last month in Australia that there were countries \u201cwho attempt to constrict movement through international waters , who create land areas where there were none; who create exclusion zones where there should be shared use.\u201d In response, he said, the Navy is creating \u201chunter-killer surface action groups\u201d of ships. He suggested that Australia, one of America\u2019s top allies, would be invited to contribute to the new efforts in offensive naval warfare.", "sentence_answer": "In another example of the Pentagon\u2019s growing criticism of China\u2019s efforts, a senior Navy commander, Rear Adm. Christopher J. Paul, said last month in Australia that there were countries \u201cwho attempt to constrict movement through international waters , who create land areas where there were none; who create exclusion zones where there should be shared use.\u201d"} +{"question": "The Navy is responding by creating what?", "paragraph": "In another example of the Pentagon\u2019s growing criticism of China\u2019s efforts, a senior Navy commander, Rear Adm. Christopher J. Paul, said last month in Australia that there were countries \u201cwho attempt to constrict movement through international waters, who create land areas where there were none; who create exclusion zones where there should be shared use.\u201d In response, he said, the Navy is creating \u201chunter-killer surface action groups\u201d of ships. He suggested that Australia, one of America\u2019s top allies, would be invited to contribute to the new efforts in offensive naval warfare.", "answer": "hunter-killer surface action groups", "sentence": "In response, he said, the Navy is creating \u201c hunter-killer surface action groups \u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "In another example of the Pentagon\u2019s growing criticism of China\u2019s efforts, a senior Navy commander, Rear Adm. Christopher J. Paul, said last month in Australia that there were countries \u201cwho attempt to constrict movement through international waters, who create land areas where there were none; who create exclusion zones where there should be shared use.\u201d In response, he said, the Navy is creating \u201c hunter-killer surface action groups \u201d of ships . He suggested that Australia, one of America\u2019s top allies, would be invited to contribute to the new efforts in offensive naval warfare.", "paragraph_answer": "In another example of the Pentagon\u2019s growing criticism of China\u2019s efforts, a senior Navy commander, Rear Adm. Christopher J. Paul, said last month in Australia that there were countries \u201cwho attempt to constrict movement through international waters, who create land areas where there were none; who create exclusion zones where there should be shared use.\u201d In response, he said, the Navy is creating \u201c hunter-killer surface action groups \u201d of ships. He suggested that Australia, one of America\u2019s top allies, would be invited to contribute to the new efforts in offensive naval warfare.", "sentence_answer": "In response, he said, the Navy is creating \u201c hunter-killer surface action groups \u201d"} +{"question": "What country would be invited to contribute to the Navy's offensive naval warfare effort?", "paragraph": "In another example of the Pentagon\u2019s growing criticism of China\u2019s efforts, a senior Navy commander, Rear Adm. Christopher J. Paul, said last month in Australia that there were countries \u201cwho attempt to constrict movement through international waters, who create land areas where there were none; who create exclusion zones where there should be shared use.\u201d In response, he said, the Navy is creating \u201chunter-killer surface action groups\u201d of ships. He suggested that Australia, one of America\u2019s top allies, would be invited to contribute to the new efforts in offensive naval warfare.", "answer": "Australia", "sentence": "In another example of the Pentagon\u2019s growing criticism of China\u2019s efforts, a senior Navy commander, Rear Adm. Christopher J. Paul, said last month in Australia that there were countries \u201cwho attempt to constrict movement through international waters, who create land areas where there were none; who create exclusion zones where there should be shared use.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " In another example of the Pentagon\u2019s growing criticism of China\u2019s efforts, a senior Navy commander, Rear Adm. Christopher J. Paul, said last month in Australia that there were countries \u201cwho attempt to constrict movement through international waters, who create land areas where there were none; who create exclusion zones where there should be shared use.\u201d In response, he said, the Navy is creating \u201chunter-killer surface action groups\u201d of ships. He suggested that Australia, one of America\u2019s top allies, would be invited to contribute to the new efforts in offensive naval warfare.", "paragraph_answer": "In another example of the Pentagon\u2019s growing criticism of China\u2019s efforts, a senior Navy commander, Rear Adm. Christopher J. Paul, said last month in Australia that there were countries \u201cwho attempt to constrict movement through international waters, who create land areas where there were none; who create exclusion zones where there should be shared use.\u201d In response, he said, the Navy is creating \u201chunter-killer surface action groups\u201d of ships. He suggested that Australia, one of America\u2019s top allies, would be invited to contribute to the new efforts in offensive naval warfare.", "sentence_answer": "In another example of the Pentagon\u2019s growing criticism of China\u2019s efforts, a senior Navy commander, Rear Adm. Christopher J. Paul, said last month in Australia that there were countries \u201cwho attempt to constrict movement through international waters, who create land areas where there were none; who create exclusion zones where there should be shared use.\u201d"} +{"question": "Where is the Clinton Correctional Facility located?", "paragraph": "Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander. They handcuffed him and took him into a broom closet for questioning. Then, Mr. Alexander said in an interview last week, the beatings began. As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going? What did you hear? How much are they paying you to keep your mouth shut?\u201d One of the guards put a plastic bag over his head, Mr. Alexander said, and threatened to waterboard him.", "answer": "New York", "sentence": "Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander.", "paragraph_sentence": " Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander. They handcuffed him and took him into a broom closet for questioning. Then, Mr. Alexander said in an interview last week, the beatings began. As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going? What did you hear? How much are they paying you to keep your mouth shut?\u201d One of the guards put a plastic bag over his head, Mr. Alexander said, and threatened to waterboard him.", "paragraph_answer": "Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander. They handcuffed him and took him into a broom closet for questioning. Then, Mr. Alexander said in an interview last week, the beatings began. As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going? What did you hear? How much are they paying you to keep your mouth shut?\u201d One of the guards put a plastic bag over his head, Mr. Alexander said, and threatened to waterboard him.", "sentence_answer": "Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander."} +{"question": "What is the name of the prisoner?", "paragraph": "Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander. They handcuffed him and took him into a broom closet for questioning. Then, Mr. Alexander said in an interview last week, the beatings began. As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going? What did you hear? How much are they paying you to keep your mouth shut?\u201d One of the guards put a plastic bag over his head, Mr. Alexander said, and threatened to waterboard him.", "answer": "Patrick Alexander", "sentence": "Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander .", "paragraph_sentence": " Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander . They handcuffed him and took him into a broom closet for questioning. Then, Mr. Alexander said in an interview last week, the beatings began. As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going? What did you hear? How much are they paying you to keep your mouth shut?\u201d One of the guards put a plastic bag over his head, Mr. Alexander said, and threatened to waterboard him.", "paragraph_answer": "Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander . They handcuffed him and took him into a broom closet for questioning. Then, Mr. Alexander said in an interview last week, the beatings began. As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going? What did you hear? How much are they paying you to keep your mouth shut?\u201d One of the guards put a plastic bag over his head, Mr. Alexander said, and threatened to waterboard him.", "sentence_answer": "Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander ."} +{"question": "How many guards were present at the beating of Patrick Alexander?", "paragraph": "Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander. They handcuffed him and took him into a broom closet for questioning. Then, Mr. Alexander said in an interview last week, the beatings began. As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going? What did you hear? How much are they paying you to keep your mouth shut?\u201d One of the guards put a plastic bag over his head, Mr. Alexander said, and threatened to waterboard him.", "answer": "three", "sentence": "As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going?", "paragraph_sentence": "Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander. They handcuffed him and took him into a broom closet for questioning. Then, Mr. Alexander said in an interview last week, the beatings began. As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going? What did you hear? How much are they paying you to keep your mouth shut?\u201d One of the guards put a plastic bag over his head, Mr. Alexander said, and threatened to waterboard him.", "paragraph_answer": "Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander. They handcuffed him and took him into a broom closet for questioning. Then, Mr. Alexander said in an interview last week, the beatings began. As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going? What did you hear? How much are they paying you to keep your mouth shut?\u201d One of the guards put a plastic bag over his head, Mr. Alexander said, and threatened to waterboard him.", "sentence_answer": "As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going?"} +{"question": "Where did the beating take place?", "paragraph": "Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander. They handcuffed him and took him into a broom closet for questioning. Then, Mr. Alexander said in an interview last week, the beatings began. As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going? What did you hear? How much are they paying you to keep your mouth shut?\u201d One of the guards put a plastic bag over his head, Mr. Alexander said, and threatened to waterboard him.", "answer": "broom closet", "sentence": "a broom closet for questioning.", "paragraph_sentence": "Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander. They handcuffed him and took him into a broom closet for questioning. Then, Mr. Alexander said in an interview last week, the beatings began. As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going? What did you hear? How much are they paying you to keep your mouth shut?\u201d One of the guards put a plastic bag over his head, Mr. Alexander said, and threatened to waterboard him.", "paragraph_answer": "Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander. They handcuffed him and took him into a broom closet for questioning. Then, Mr. Alexander said in an interview last week, the beatings began. As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going? What did you hear? How much are they paying you to keep your mouth shut?\u201d One of the guards put a plastic bag over his head, Mr. Alexander said, and threatened to waterboard him.", "sentence_answer": "a broom closet for questioning."} +{"question": "What torture technique did one of the guards threaten to use on Patrick Alexander?", "paragraph": "Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander. They handcuffed him and took him into a broom closet for questioning. Then, Mr. Alexander said in an interview last week, the beatings began. As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going? What did you hear? How much are they paying you to keep your mouth shut?\u201d One of the guards put a plastic bag over his head, Mr. Alexander said, and threatened to waterboard him.", "answer": "waterboard", "sentence": "One of the guards put a plastic bag over his head, Mr. Alexander said, and threatened to waterboard him.", "paragraph_sentence": "Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander. They handcuffed him and took him into a broom closet for questioning. Then, Mr. Alexander said in an interview last week, the beatings began. As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going? What did you hear? How much are they paying you to keep your mouth shut?\u201d One of the guards put a plastic bag over his head, Mr. Alexander said, and threatened to waterboard him. ", "paragraph_answer": "Night had fallen at the Clinton Correctional Facility in far northern New York when the prison guards came for Patrick Alexander. They handcuffed him and took him into a broom closet for questioning. Then, Mr. Alexander said in an interview last week, the beatings began. As the three guards, who wore no name badges, punched him and slammed his head against the wall, he said they shouted questions: \u201cWhere are they going? What did you hear? How much are they paying you to keep your mouth shut?\u201d One of the guards put a plastic bag over his head, Mr. Alexander said, and threatened to waterboard him.", "sentence_answer": "One of the guards put a plastic bag over his head, Mr. Alexander said, and threatened to waterboard him."} +{"question": "What month did the prison break occur?", "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": "June", "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."} +{"question": "Which newspaper investigated the incident?", "paragraph": "For days after the June prison break, corrections officers carried out what seemed like a campaign of retribution against dozens of Clinton inmates, particularly those on the honor block, an investigation by The New York Times found. In letters reviewed by The Times, as well as prison interviews, inmates described a strikingly similar catalog of abuses, including being beaten while handcuffed, choked and slammed against cell bars and walls. They were also subjected to harsh policies ordered by the State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision: Dozens of inmates, many of whom had won the right to live on the honor block after years of good behavior, were transferred out of Clinton to other prisons. Many were placed in solitary confinement, and stripped of privileges they had accrued over the years \u2014 even though no prisoners have yet been linked to Mr. Matt\u2019s and Mr. Sweat\u2019s actions.", "answer": "The New York Times", "sentence": "For days after the June prison break, corrections officers carried out what seemed like a campaign of retribution against dozens of Clinton inmates, particularly those on the honor block, an investigation by The New York Times found.", "paragraph_sentence": " For days after the June prison break, corrections officers carried out what seemed like a campaign of retribution against dozens of Clinton inmates, particularly those on the honor block, an investigation by The New York Times found. In letters reviewed by The Times, as well as prison interviews, inmates described a strikingly similar catalog of abuses, including being beaten while handcuffed, choked and slammed against cell bars and walls. They were also subjected to harsh policies ordered by the State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision: Dozens of inmates, many of whom had won the right to live on the honor block after years of good behavior, were transferred out of Clinton to other prisons. Many were placed in solitary confinement, and stripped of privileges they had accrued over the years \u2014 even though no prisoners have yet been linked to Mr. Matt\u2019s and Mr. Sweat\u2019s actions.", "paragraph_answer": "For days after the June prison break, corrections officers carried out what seemed like a campaign of retribution against dozens of Clinton inmates, particularly those on the honor block, an investigation by The New York Times found. In letters reviewed by The Times, as well as prison interviews, inmates described a strikingly similar catalog of abuses, including being beaten while handcuffed, choked and slammed against cell bars and walls. They were also subjected to harsh policies ordered by the State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision: Dozens of inmates, many of whom had won the right to live on the honor block after years of good behavior, were transferred out of Clinton to other prisons. Many were placed in solitary confinement, and stripped of privileges they had accrued over the years \u2014 even though no prisoners have yet been linked to Mr. Matt\u2019s and Mr. Sweat\u2019s actions.", "sentence_answer": "For days after the June prison break, corrections officers carried out what seemed like a campaign of retribution against dozens of Clinton inmates, particularly those on the honor block, an investigation by The New York Times found."} +{"question": "Which inmates were most likely to be the victims of retribution?", "paragraph": "For days after the June prison break, corrections officers carried out what seemed like a campaign of retribution against dozens of Clinton inmates, particularly those on the honor block, an investigation by The New York Times found. In letters reviewed by The Times, as well as prison interviews, inmates described a strikingly similar catalog of abuses, including being beaten while handcuffed, choked and slammed against cell bars and walls. They were also subjected to harsh policies ordered by the State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision: Dozens of inmates, many of whom had won the right to live on the honor block after years of good behavior, were transferred out of Clinton to other prisons. Many were placed in solitary confinement, and stripped of privileges they had accrued over the years \u2014 even though no prisoners have yet been linked to Mr. Matt\u2019s and Mr. Sweat\u2019s actions.", "answer": "those on the honor block", "sentence": "For days after the June prison break, corrections officers carried out what seemed like a campaign of retribution against dozens of Clinton inmates, particularly those on the honor block , an investigation by The New York Times found.", "paragraph_sentence": " For days after the June prison break, corrections officers carried out what seemed like a campaign of retribution against dozens of Clinton inmates, particularly those on the honor block , an investigation by The New York Times found. In letters reviewed by The Times, as well as prison interviews, inmates described a strikingly similar catalog of abuses, including being beaten while handcuffed, choked and slammed against cell bars and walls. They were also subjected to harsh policies ordered by the State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision: Dozens of inmates, many of whom had won the right to live on the honor block after years of good behavior, were transferred out of Clinton to other prisons. Many were placed in solitary confinement, and stripped of privileges they had accrued over the years \u2014 even though no prisoners have yet been linked to Mr. Matt\u2019s and Mr. Sweat\u2019s actions.", "paragraph_answer": "For days after the June prison break, corrections officers carried out what seemed like a campaign of retribution against dozens of Clinton inmates, particularly those on the honor block , an investigation by The New York Times found. In letters reviewed by The Times, as well as prison interviews, inmates described a strikingly similar catalog of abuses, including being beaten while handcuffed, choked and slammed against cell bars and walls. They were also subjected to harsh policies ordered by the State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision: Dozens of inmates, many of whom had won the right to live on the honor block after years of good behavior, were transferred out of Clinton to other prisons. Many were placed in solitary confinement, and stripped of privileges they had accrued over the years \u2014 even though no prisoners have yet been linked to Mr. Matt\u2019s and Mr. Sweat\u2019s actions.", "sentence_answer": "For days after the June prison break, corrections officers carried out what seemed like a campaign of retribution against dozens of Clinton inmates, particularly those on the honor block , an investigation by The New York Times found."} +{"question": "Which department was responsible for the harsh policies?", "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": "State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"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."} +{"question": "Which prison location has the leadership been removed?", "paragraph": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy, a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "answer": "Dannemora", "sentence": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora , has been removed.", "paragraph_sentence": " Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora , has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy, a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "paragraph_answer": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora , has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy, a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "sentence_answer": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora , has been removed."} +{"question": "Who is the lawyer for Prisoner's legal Services?", "paragraph": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy, a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "answer": "Michael Cassidy", "sentence": "\u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy , a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "paragraph_sentence": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy , a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services. ", "paragraph_answer": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy , a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy , a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services."} +{"question": "How many member of the inmate council signed the letter?", "paragraph": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy, a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "answer": "10", "sentence": "And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations.", "paragraph_sentence": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy, a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "paragraph_answer": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy, a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "sentence_answer": "And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations."} +{"question": "How many officers have been suspended?", "paragraph": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy, a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "answer": "nine", "sentence": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed.", "paragraph_sentence": " Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy, a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "paragraph_answer": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy, a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "sentence_answer": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed."} +{"question": "How many prisoners filed complaints?", "paragraph": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy, a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "answer": "More than 60", "sentence": "More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners.", "paragraph_sentence": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy, a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "paragraph_answer": "Indeed, it is prison employees who have been implicated: One has pleaded guilty to aiding the escape; another faces criminal charges; nine officers have been suspended; and the leadership of the prison, in Dannemora, has been removed. More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners. And 10 members of an inmate council at Clinton signed a letter last month to state corrections officials making similar allegations. \u201cWe have been daily getting complaints along these lines from around the state,\u201d said Michael Cassidy, a lawyer for Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services.", "sentence_answer": " More than 60 inmates have filed complaints with Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services of New York, an organization that assists indigent prisoners."} +{"question": "What condition was Mr Alexander in when he was returned to his cell?", "paragraph": "The officer then put the bag over his head and started beating him again, Mr. Alexander said. He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes, and he was then taken, bleeding, back to his cell. Later, Mr. Alexander said, the same officer \u201cbegan quietly taunting and threatening me, telling me, \u2018Don\u2019t worry, Fat Boy, we\u2019ll be seeing you really soon.\u2019 \u201d In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services, Mr. Aponte, who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later.", "answer": "bleeding", "sentence": "He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes, and he was then taken, bleeding , back to his cell.", "paragraph_sentence": "The officer then put the bag over his head and started beating him again, Mr. Alexander said. He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes, and he was then taken, bleeding , back to his cell. Later, Mr. Alexander said, the same officer \u201cbegan quietly taunting and threatening me, telling me, \u2018Don\u2019t worry, Fat Boy, we\u2019ll be seeing you really soon.\u2019 \u201d In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services, Mr. Aponte, who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later.", "paragraph_answer": "The officer then put the bag over his head and started beating him again, Mr. Alexander said. He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes, and he was then taken, bleeding , back to his cell. Later, Mr. Alexander said, the same officer \u201cbegan quietly taunting and threatening me, telling me, \u2018Don\u2019t worry, Fat Boy, we\u2019ll be seeing you really soon.\u2019 \u201d In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services, Mr. Aponte, who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later.", "sentence_answer": "He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes, and he was then taken, bleeding , back to his cell."} +{"question": "How long did the interrogation last?", "paragraph": "The officer then put the bag over his head and started beating him again, Mr. Alexander said. He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes, and he was then taken, bleeding, back to his cell. Later, Mr. Alexander said, the same officer \u201cbegan quietly taunting and threatening me, telling me, \u2018Don\u2019t worry, Fat Boy, we\u2019ll be seeing you really soon.\u2019 \u201d In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services, Mr. Aponte, who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later.", "answer": "about 20 minutes", "sentence": "He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes , and he was then taken, bleeding, back to his cell.", "paragraph_sentence": "The officer then put the bag over his head and started beating him again, Mr. Alexander said. He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes , and he was then taken, bleeding, back to his cell. Later, Mr. Alexander said, the same officer \u201cbegan quietly taunting and threatening me, telling me, \u2018Don\u2019t worry, Fat Boy, we\u2019ll be seeing you really soon.\u2019 \u201d In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services, Mr. Aponte, who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later.", "paragraph_answer": "The officer then put the bag over his head and started beating him again, Mr. Alexander said. He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes , and he was then taken, bleeding, back to his cell. Later, Mr. Alexander said, the same officer \u201cbegan quietly taunting and threatening me, telling me, \u2018Don\u2019t worry, Fat Boy, we\u2019ll be seeing you really soon.\u2019 \u201d In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services, Mr. Aponte, who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later.", "sentence_answer": "He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes , and he was then taken, bleeding, back to his cell."} +{"question": "Who worked at the tailor shop?", "paragraph": "The officer then put the bag over his head and started beating him again, Mr. Alexander said. He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes, and he was then taken, bleeding, back to his cell. Later, Mr. Alexander said, the same officer \u201cbegan quietly taunting and threatening me, telling me, \u2018Don\u2019t worry, Fat Boy, we\u2019ll be seeing you really soon.\u2019 \u201d In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services, Mr. Aponte, who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later.", "answer": "Mr. Aponte", "sentence": "In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services, Mr. Aponte , who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later.", "paragraph_sentence": "The officer then put the bag over his head and started beating him again, Mr. Alexander said. He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes, and he was then taken, bleeding, back to his cell. Later, Mr. Alexander said, the same officer \u201cbegan quietly taunting and threatening me, telling me, \u2018Don\u2019t worry, Fat Boy, we\u2019ll be seeing you really soon.\u2019 \u201d In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services, Mr. Aponte , who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later. ", "paragraph_answer": "The officer then put the bag over his head and started beating him again, Mr. Alexander said. He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes, and he was then taken, bleeding, back to his cell. Later, Mr. Alexander said, the same officer \u201cbegan quietly taunting and threatening me, telling me, \u2018Don\u2019t worry, Fat Boy, we\u2019ll be seeing you really soon.\u2019 \u201d In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services, Mr. Aponte , who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later.", "sentence_answer": "In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services, Mr. Aponte , who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later."} +{"question": "How many days later was Mr Apontes interrogation?", "paragraph": "The officer then put the bag over his head and started beating him again, Mr. Alexander said. He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes, and he was then taken, bleeding, back to his cell. Later, Mr. Alexander said, the same officer \u201cbegan quietly taunting and threatening me, telling me, \u2018Don\u2019t worry, Fat Boy, we\u2019ll be seeing you really soon.\u2019 \u201d In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services, Mr. Aponte, who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later.", "answer": "two", "sentence": "In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services, Mr. Aponte, who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later.", "paragraph_sentence": "The officer then put the bag over his head and started beating him again, Mr. Alexander said. He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes, and he was then taken, bleeding, back to his cell. Later, Mr. Alexander said, the same officer \u201cbegan quietly taunting and threatening me, telling me, \u2018Don\u2019t worry, Fat Boy, we\u2019ll be seeing you really soon.\u2019 \u201d In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services, Mr. Aponte, who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later. ", "paragraph_answer": "The officer then put the bag over his head and started beating him again, Mr. Alexander said. He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes, and he was then taken, bleeding, back to his cell. Later, Mr. Alexander said, the same officer \u201cbegan quietly taunting and threatening me, telling me, \u2018Don\u2019t worry, Fat Boy, we\u2019ll be seeing you really soon.\u2019 \u201d In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services, Mr. Aponte, who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later.", "sentence_answer": "In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services, Mr. Aponte, who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later."} +{"question": "Who was a letter written to?", "paragraph": "The officer then put the bag over his head and started beating him again, Mr. Alexander said. He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes, and he was then taken, bleeding, back to his cell. Later, Mr. Alexander said, the same officer \u201cbegan quietly taunting and threatening me, telling me, \u2018Don\u2019t worry, Fat Boy, we\u2019ll be seeing you really soon.\u2019 \u201d In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services, Mr. Aponte, who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later.", "answer": "Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services", "sentence": "In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services , Mr. Aponte, who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later.", "paragraph_sentence": "The officer then put the bag over his head and started beating him again, Mr. Alexander said. He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes, and he was then taken, bleeding, back to his cell. Later, Mr. Alexander said, the same officer \u201cbegan quietly taunting and threatening me, telling me, \u2018Don\u2019t worry, Fat Boy, we\u2019ll be seeing you really soon.\u2019 \u201d In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services , Mr. Aponte, who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later. ", "paragraph_answer": "The officer then put the bag over his head and started beating him again, Mr. Alexander said. He said the interrogation lasted about 20 minutes, and he was then taken, bleeding, back to his cell. Later, Mr. Alexander said, the same officer \u201cbegan quietly taunting and threatening me, telling me, \u2018Don\u2019t worry, Fat Boy, we\u2019ll be seeing you really soon.\u2019 \u201d In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services , Mr. Aponte, who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later.", "sentence_answer": "In a letter to Prisoners\u2019 Legal Services , Mr. Aponte, who also worked in the tailor shop, described going through a similar interrogation two days later."} +{"question": "Who was Mr Aponte warned not to say anything to?", "paragraph": "Mr. Aponte, along with several other inmates, said they were initially denied medical care. Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic, officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter. \u201cThe sergeant tells me that I\u2019ve been in prison for a long time and I should know better, that if I didn\u2019t tell the nurse that was going to examine me that nothing has happened that they were going to kill me for real this time,\u201d he wrote. Paul Davila, another resident of the honor block, wrote in his complaint that after he was beaten during an interrogation, he was pressured to \u201csign a report stating, \u2018I was not assaulted.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "medical staff", "sentence": "Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic, officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Aponte, along with several other inmates, said they were initially denied medical care. Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic, officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter. \u201cThe sergeant tells me that I\u2019ve been in prison for a long time and I should know better, that if I didn\u2019t tell the nurse that was going to examine me that nothing has happened that they were going to kill me for real this time,\u201d he wrote. Paul Davila, another resident of the honor block, wrote in his complaint that after he was beaten during an interrogation, he was pressured to \u201csign a report stating, \u2018I was not assaulted.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Aponte, along with several other inmates, said they were initially denied medical care. Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic, officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter. \u201cThe sergeant tells me that I\u2019ve been in prison for a long time and I should know better, that if I didn\u2019t tell the nurse that was going to examine me that nothing has happened that they were going to kill me for real this time,\u201d he wrote. Paul Davila, another resident of the honor block, wrote in his complaint that after he was beaten during an interrogation, he was pressured to \u201csign a report stating, \u2018I was not assaulted.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic, officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter."} +{"question": "Who was pressured into signing a report stating that he wasnt beaten?", "paragraph": "Mr. Aponte, along with several other inmates, said they were initially denied medical care. Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic, officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter. \u201cThe sergeant tells me that I\u2019ve been in prison for a long time and I should know better, that if I didn\u2019t tell the nurse that was going to examine me that nothing has happened that they were going to kill me for real this time,\u201d he wrote. Paul Davila, another resident of the honor block, wrote in his complaint that after he was beaten during an interrogation, he was pressured to \u201csign a report stating, \u2018I was not assaulted.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "Paul Davila", "sentence": "Paul Davila , another resident of the honor block, wrote in his complaint that after he was beaten during an interrogation, he was pressured to \u201csign a report stating, \u2018I was not assaulted.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Aponte, along with several other inmates, said they were initially denied medical care. Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic, officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter. \u201cThe sergeant tells me that I\u2019ve been in prison for a long time and I should know better, that if I didn\u2019t tell the nurse that was going to examine me that nothing has happened that they were going to kill me for real this time,\u201d he wrote. Paul Davila , another resident of the honor block, wrote in his complaint that after he was beaten during an interrogation, he was pressured to \u201csign a report stating, \u2018I was not assaulted.\u2019 \u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Aponte, along with several other inmates, said they were initially denied medical care. Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic, officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter. \u201cThe sergeant tells me that I\u2019ve been in prison for a long time and I should know better, that if I didn\u2019t tell the nurse that was going to examine me that nothing has happened that they were going to kill me for real this time,\u201d he wrote. Paul Davila , another resident of the honor block, wrote in his complaint that after he was beaten during an interrogation, he was pressured to \u201csign a report stating, \u2018I was not assaulted.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": " Paul Davila , another resident of the honor block, wrote in his complaint that after he was beaten during an interrogation, he was pressured to \u201csign a report stating, \u2018I was not assaulted.\u2019 \u201d"} +{"question": "Where was Paul Davila housed in the prison?", "paragraph": "Mr. Aponte, along with several other inmates, said they were initially denied medical care. Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic, officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter. \u201cThe sergeant tells me that I\u2019ve been in prison for a long time and I should know better, that if I didn\u2019t tell the nurse that was going to examine me that nothing has happened that they were going to kill me for real this time,\u201d he wrote. Paul Davila, another resident of the honor block, wrote in his complaint that after he was beaten during an interrogation, he was pressured to \u201csign a report stating, \u2018I was not assaulted.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "honor block", "sentence": "Paul Davila, another resident of the honor block , wrote in his complaint that after he was beaten during an interrogation, he was pressured to \u201csign a report stating, \u2018I was not assaulted.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Aponte, along with several other inmates, said they were initially denied medical care. Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic, officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter. \u201cThe sergeant tells me that I\u2019ve been in prison for a long time and I should know better, that if I didn\u2019t tell the nurse that was going to examine me that nothing has happened that they were going to kill me for real this time,\u201d he wrote. Paul Davila, another resident of the honor block , wrote in his complaint that after he was beaten during an interrogation, he was pressured to \u201csign a report stating, \u2018I was not assaulted.\u2019 \u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Aponte, along with several other inmates, said they were initially denied medical care. Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic, officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter. \u201cThe sergeant tells me that I\u2019ve been in prison for a long time and I should know better, that if I didn\u2019t tell the nurse that was going to examine me that nothing has happened that they were going to kill me for real this time,\u201d he wrote. Paul Davila, another resident of the honor block , wrote in his complaint that after he was beaten during an interrogation, he was pressured to \u201csign a report stating, \u2018I was not assaulted.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "Paul Davila, another resident of the honor block , wrote in his complaint that after he was beaten during an interrogation, he was pressured to \u201csign a report stating, \u2018I was not assaulted.\u2019 \u201d"} +{"question": "Where was Mr Aponte taken for his injuries?", "paragraph": "Mr. Aponte, along with several other inmates, said they were initially denied medical care. Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic, officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter. \u201cThe sergeant tells me that I\u2019ve been in prison for a long time and I should know better, that if I didn\u2019t tell the nurse that was going to examine me that nothing has happened that they were going to kill me for real this time,\u201d he wrote. Paul Davila, another resident of the honor block, wrote in his complaint that after he was beaten during an interrogation, he was pressured to \u201csign a report stating, \u2018I was not assaulted.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "prison clinic", "sentence": "Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic , officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Aponte, along with several other inmates, said they were initially denied medical care. Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic , officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter. \u201cThe sergeant tells me that I\u2019ve been in prison for a long time and I should know better, that if I didn\u2019t tell the nurse that was going to examine me that nothing has happened that they were going to kill me for real this time,\u201d he wrote. Paul Davila, another resident of the honor block, wrote in his complaint that after he was beaten during an interrogation, he was pressured to \u201csign a report stating, \u2018I was not assaulted.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Aponte, along with several other inmates, said they were initially denied medical care. Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic , officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter. \u201cThe sergeant tells me that I\u2019ve been in prison for a long time and I should know better, that if I didn\u2019t tell the nurse that was going to examine me that nothing has happened that they were going to kill me for real this time,\u201d he wrote. Paul Davila, another resident of the honor block, wrote in his complaint that after he was beaten during an interrogation, he was pressured to \u201csign a report stating, \u2018I was not assaulted.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "Days later, when he was finally taken to the prison clinic , officers warned him not to tell the medical staff how he got his injuries, he wrote in a letter."} +{"question": "Where did the interview take place?", "paragraph": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "answer": "Sing Sing Correctional Facility", "sentence": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly.", "paragraph_sentence": " During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly."} +{"question": "Who was the supervisor at the prisons tailor shop?", "paragraph": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Edwards", "sentence": "Mr. Edwards , who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week.", "paragraph_sentence": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards , who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards , who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Edwards , who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week."} +{"question": "How much does Mr Edwards make as a porter per week?", "paragraph": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "answer": "$3", "sentence": "Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week.", "paragraph_sentence": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week."} +{"question": "Who had scars on his ankles?", "paragraph": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Nu\u00f1ez", "sentence": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly.", "paragraph_sentence": " During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly."} +{"question": "How much per week was Mr Edwards able to earn in the tailor shop[?", "paragraph": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "answer": "$45", "sentence": "Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week.", "paragraph_sentence": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "During an interview last week at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Westchester County, Mr. Nu\u00f1ez showed reporters purple scars around his right ankle that he said were the result of CERT officers\u2019 intentionally shackling him too tightly. Some of the former honor block residents have lost privileges that had taken years to earn at Clinton. Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week. Since being moved to Sing Sing, he has been working as a porter making $3 a week. \u201cThey took everything from me,\u201d he said. \u201cThey did everything they could to blame the ones who stayed.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Edwards, who had supervised 50 inmates at the prison tailor shop, had been able to earn as much as $45 a week."} +{"question": "Who wrote \"People Places Things\"?", "paragraph": "The fleeting pleasures of \u201cPeople Places Things,\u201d Jim Strouse\u2019s winsome trifle of a comedy, derive almost entirely from the charm of its star, Jemaine Clement, the New Zealand-born actor best known in America as one-half of the musical comedy duo Flight of the Conchords. Mr. Clement plays Will, a married 40-year-old graphic novelist and teacher of comic book art whose college classes are perceptive, witty mini-essays on drawing and narrative (illustrated by Mr. Strouse, a faculty member at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan). The story begins at a fifth birthday party for Will\u2019s twin daughters (Gia and Aundrea Gadsby) in his family\u2019s Brooklyn brownstone. In the middle of the celebration, Will goes upstairs and finds his wife, Charlie (Stephanie Allynne), having sex with their friend Gary (an ill-used Michael Chernus), an Off Broadway performance artist.", "answer": "Jim Strouse", "sentence": "The fleeting pleasures of \u201cPeople Places Things,\u201d Jim Strouse \u2019s winsome trifle of a comedy, derive almost entirely from the charm of its star, Jemaine Clement, the New Zealand-born actor best known in America as one-half of the musical comedy duo Flight of the Conchords.", "paragraph_sentence": " The fleeting pleasures of \u201cPeople Places Things,\u201d Jim Strouse \u2019s winsome trifle of a comedy, derive almost entirely from the charm of its star, Jemaine Clement, the New Zealand-born actor best known in America as one-half of the musical comedy duo Flight of the Conchords. Mr. Clement plays Will, a married 40-year-old graphic novelist and teacher of comic book art whose college classes are perceptive, witty mini-essays on drawing and narrative (illustrated by Mr. Strouse, a faculty member at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan). The story begins at a fifth birthday party for Will\u2019s twin daughters (Gia and Aundrea Gadsby) in his family\u2019s Brooklyn brownstone. In the middle of the celebration, Will goes upstairs and finds his wife, Charlie (Stephanie Allynne), having sex with their friend Gary (an ill-used Michael Chernus), an Off Broadway performance artist.", "paragraph_answer": "The fleeting pleasures of \u201cPeople Places Things,\u201d Jim Strouse \u2019s winsome trifle of a comedy, derive almost entirely from the charm of its star, Jemaine Clement, the New Zealand-born actor best known in America as one-half of the musical comedy duo Flight of the Conchords. Mr. Clement plays Will, a married 40-year-old graphic novelist and teacher of comic book art whose college classes are perceptive, witty mini-essays on drawing and narrative (illustrated by Mr. Strouse, a faculty member at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan). The story begins at a fifth birthday party for Will\u2019s twin daughters (Gia and Aundrea Gadsby) in his family\u2019s Brooklyn brownstone. In the middle of the celebration, Will goes upstairs and finds his wife, Charlie (Stephanie Allynne), having sex with their friend Gary (an ill-used Michael Chernus), an Off Broadway performance artist.", "sentence_answer": "The fleeting pleasures of \u201cPeople Places Things,\u201d Jim Strouse \u2019s winsome trifle of a comedy, derive almost entirely from the charm of its star, Jemaine Clement, the New Zealand-born actor best known in America as one-half of the musical comedy duo Flight of the Conchords."} +{"question": "Who is the star of \"People Places Things\"?", "paragraph": "The fleeting pleasures of \u201cPeople Places Things,\u201d Jim Strouse\u2019s winsome trifle of a comedy, derive almost entirely from the charm of its star, Jemaine Clement, the New Zealand-born actor best known in America as one-half of the musical comedy duo Flight of the Conchords. Mr. Clement plays Will, a married 40-year-old graphic novelist and teacher of comic book art whose college classes are perceptive, witty mini-essays on drawing and narrative (illustrated by Mr. Strouse, a faculty member at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan). The story begins at a fifth birthday party for Will\u2019s twin daughters (Gia and Aundrea Gadsby) in his family\u2019s Brooklyn brownstone. In the middle of the celebration, Will goes upstairs and finds his wife, Charlie (Stephanie Allynne), having sex with their friend Gary (an ill-used Michael Chernus), an Off Broadway performance artist.", "answer": "Jemaine Clement", "sentence": "The fleeting pleasures of \u201cPeople Places Things,\u201d Jim Strouse\u2019s winsome trifle of a comedy, derive almost entirely from the charm of its star, Jemaine Clement , the New Zealand-born actor best known in America as one-half of the musical comedy duo Flight of the Conchords.", "paragraph_sentence": " The fleeting pleasures of \u201cPeople Places Things,\u201d Jim Strouse\u2019s winsome trifle of a comedy, derive almost entirely from the charm of its star, Jemaine Clement , the New Zealand-born actor best known in America as one-half of the musical comedy duo Flight of the Conchords. Mr. Clement plays Will, a married 40-year-old graphic novelist and teacher of comic book art whose college classes are perceptive, witty mini-essays on drawing and narrative (illustrated by Mr. Strouse, a faculty member at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan). The story begins at a fifth birthday party for Will\u2019s twin daughters (Gia and Aundrea Gadsby) in his family\u2019s Brooklyn brownstone. In the middle of the celebration, Will goes upstairs and finds his wife, Charlie (Stephanie Allynne), having sex with their friend Gary (an ill-used Michael Chernus), an Off Broadway performance artist.", "paragraph_answer": "The fleeting pleasures of \u201cPeople Places Things,\u201d Jim Strouse\u2019s winsome trifle of a comedy, derive almost entirely from the charm of its star, Jemaine Clement , the New Zealand-born actor best known in America as one-half of the musical comedy duo Flight of the Conchords. Mr. Clement plays Will, a married 40-year-old graphic novelist and teacher of comic book art whose college classes are perceptive, witty mini-essays on drawing and narrative (illustrated by Mr. Strouse, a faculty member at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan). The story begins at a fifth birthday party for Will\u2019s twin daughters (Gia and Aundrea Gadsby) in his family\u2019s Brooklyn brownstone. In the middle of the celebration, Will goes upstairs and finds his wife, Charlie (Stephanie Allynne), having sex with their friend Gary (an ill-used Michael Chernus), an Off Broadway performance artist.", "sentence_answer": "The fleeting pleasures of \u201cPeople Places Things,\u201d Jim Strouse\u2019s winsome trifle of a comedy, derive almost entirely from the charm of its star, Jemaine Clement , the New Zealand-born actor best known in America as one-half of the musical comedy duo Flight of the Conchords."} +{"question": "What music duo is Jermaine Clement part of?", "paragraph": "The fleeting pleasures of \u201cPeople Places Things,\u201d Jim Strouse\u2019s winsome trifle of a comedy, derive almost entirely from the charm of its star, Jemaine Clement, the New Zealand-born actor best known in America as one-half of the musical comedy duo Flight of the Conchords. Mr. Clement plays Will, a married 40-year-old graphic novelist and teacher of comic book art whose college classes are perceptive, witty mini-essays on drawing and narrative (illustrated by Mr. Strouse, a faculty member at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan). The story begins at a fifth birthday party for Will\u2019s twin daughters (Gia and Aundrea Gadsby) in his family\u2019s Brooklyn brownstone. In the middle of the celebration, Will goes upstairs and finds his wife, Charlie (Stephanie Allynne), having sex with their friend Gary (an ill-used Michael Chernus), an Off Broadway performance artist.", "answer": "Flight of the Conchords", "sentence": "The fleeting pleasures of \u201cPeople Places Things,\u201d Jim Strouse\u2019s winsome trifle of a comedy, derive almost entirely from the charm of its star, Jemaine Clement, the New Zealand-born actor best known in America as one-half of the musical comedy duo Flight of the Conchords .", "paragraph_sentence": " The fleeting pleasures of \u201cPeople Places Things,\u201d Jim Strouse\u2019s winsome trifle of a comedy, derive almost entirely from the charm of its star, Jemaine Clement, the New Zealand-born actor best known in America as one-half of the musical comedy duo Flight of the Conchords . Mr. Clement plays Will, a married 40-year-old graphic novelist and teacher of comic book art whose college classes are perceptive, witty mini-essays on drawing and narrative (illustrated by Mr. Strouse, a faculty member at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan). The story begins at a fifth birthday party for Will\u2019s twin daughters (Gia and Aundrea Gadsby) in his family\u2019s Brooklyn brownstone. In the middle of the celebration, Will goes upstairs and finds his wife, Charlie (Stephanie Allynne), having sex with their friend Gary (an ill-used Michael Chernus), an Off Broadway performance artist.", "paragraph_answer": "The fleeting pleasures of \u201cPeople Places Things,\u201d Jim Strouse\u2019s winsome trifle of a comedy, derive almost entirely from the charm of its star, Jemaine Clement, the New Zealand-born actor best known in America as one-half of the musical comedy duo Flight of the Conchords . Mr. Clement plays Will, a married 40-year-old graphic novelist and teacher of comic book art whose college classes are perceptive, witty mini-essays on drawing and narrative (illustrated by Mr. Strouse, a faculty member at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan). The story begins at a fifth birthday party for Will\u2019s twin daughters (Gia and Aundrea Gadsby) in his family\u2019s Brooklyn brownstone. In the middle of the celebration, Will goes upstairs and finds his wife, Charlie (Stephanie Allynne), having sex with their friend Gary (an ill-used Michael Chernus), an Off Broadway performance artist.", "sentence_answer": "The fleeting pleasures of \u201cPeople Places Things,\u201d Jim Strouse\u2019s winsome trifle of a comedy, derive almost entirely from the charm of its star, Jemaine Clement, the New Zealand-born actor best known in America as one-half of the musical comedy duo Flight of the Conchords ."} +{"question": "Who plays Will's twin daughters?", "paragraph": "The fleeting pleasures of \u201cPeople Places Things,\u201d Jim Strouse\u2019s winsome trifle of a comedy, derive almost entirely from the charm of its star, Jemaine Clement, the New Zealand-born actor best known in America as one-half of the musical comedy duo Flight of the Conchords. Mr. Clement plays Will, a married 40-year-old graphic novelist and teacher of comic book art whose college classes are perceptive, witty mini-essays on drawing and narrative (illustrated by Mr. Strouse, a faculty member at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan). The story begins at a fifth birthday party for Will\u2019s twin daughters (Gia and Aundrea Gadsby) in his family\u2019s Brooklyn brownstone. In the middle of the celebration, Will goes upstairs and finds his wife, Charlie (Stephanie Allynne), having sex with their friend Gary (an ill-used Michael Chernus), an Off Broadway performance artist.", "answer": "Gia and Aundrea Gadsby", "sentence": "The story begins at a fifth birthday party for Will\u2019s twin daughters ( Gia and Aundrea Gadsby ) in his family\u2019s Brooklyn brownstone.", "paragraph_sentence": "The fleeting pleasures of \u201cPeople Places Things,\u201d Jim Strouse\u2019s winsome trifle of a comedy, derive almost entirely from the charm of its star, Jemaine Clement, the New Zealand-born actor best known in America as one-half of the musical comedy duo Flight of the Conchords. Mr. Clement plays Will, a married 40-year-old graphic novelist and teacher of comic book art whose college classes are perceptive, witty mini-essays on drawing and narrative (illustrated by Mr. Strouse, a faculty member at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan). The story begins at a fifth birthday party for Will\u2019s twin daughters ( Gia and Aundrea Gadsby ) in his family\u2019s Brooklyn brownstone. In the middle of the celebration, Will goes upstairs and finds his wife, Charlie (Stephanie Allynne), having sex with their friend Gary (an ill-used Michael Chernus), an Off Broadway performance artist.", "paragraph_answer": "The fleeting pleasures of \u201cPeople Places Things,\u201d Jim Strouse\u2019s winsome trifle of a comedy, derive almost entirely from the charm of its star, Jemaine Clement, the New Zealand-born actor best known in America as one-half of the musical comedy duo Flight of the Conchords. Mr. Clement plays Will, a married 40-year-old graphic novelist and teacher of comic book art whose college classes are perceptive, witty mini-essays on drawing and narrative (illustrated by Mr. Strouse, a faculty member at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan). The story begins at a fifth birthday party for Will\u2019s twin daughters ( Gia and Aundrea Gadsby ) in his family\u2019s Brooklyn brownstone. In the middle of the celebration, Will goes upstairs and finds his wife, Charlie (Stephanie Allynne), having sex with their friend Gary (an ill-used Michael Chernus), an Off Broadway performance artist.", "sentence_answer": "The story begins at a fifth birthday party for Will\u2019s twin daughters ( Gia and Aundrea Gadsby ) in his family\u2019s Brooklyn brownstone."} +{"question": "What movie seems at odds with itself?", "paragraph": "From its opening moments, \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d seems at odds with itself. It is realistic about New York place names yet disconnected from reality. Will, who is handsome in an appealingly scruffy way, is a faithful husband with a warm, self-deprecating sense of humor and an acute roving intelligence. Only a fool would trade him for Gary, a glum, pudgy blob. Although this cowering, monosyllabic marshmallow makes several more appearances in the film, Mr. Strouse\u2019s screenplay doesn\u2019t give him a single likable trait.", "answer": "People Places Things", "sentence": "From its opening moments, \u201c People Places Things \u201d seems at odds with itself.", "paragraph_sentence": " From its opening moments, \u201c People Places Things \u201d seems at odds with itself. It is realistic about New York place names yet disconnected from reality. Will, who is handsome in an appealingly scruffy way, is a faithful husband with a warm, self-deprecating sense of humor and an acute roving intelligence. Only a fool would trade him for Gary, a glum, pudgy blob. Although this cowering, monosyllabic marshmallow makes several more appearances in the film, Mr. Strouse\u2019s screenplay doesn\u2019t give him a single likable trait.", "paragraph_answer": "From its opening moments, \u201c People Places Things \u201d seems at odds with itself. It is realistic about New York place names yet disconnected from reality. Will, who is handsome in an appealingly scruffy way, is a faithful husband with a warm, self-deprecating sense of humor and an acute roving intelligence. Only a fool would trade him for Gary, a glum, pudgy blob. Although this cowering, monosyllabic marshmallow makes several more appearances in the film, Mr. Strouse\u2019s screenplay doesn\u2019t give him a single likable trait.", "sentence_answer": "From its opening moments, \u201c People Places Things \u201d seems at odds with itself."} +{"question": "Which character is handsome in an appealingly scruffy way?", "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": "Will", "sentence": "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.", "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": " 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."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What is the name of Strouse's screenplay?", "paragraph": "From its opening moments, \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d seems at odds with itself. It is realistic about New York place names yet disconnected from reality. Will, who is handsome in an appealingly scruffy way, is a faithful husband with a warm, self-deprecating sense of humor and an acute roving intelligence. Only a fool would trade him for Gary, a glum, pudgy blob. Although this cowering, monosyllabic marshmallow makes several more appearances in the film, Mr. Strouse\u2019s screenplay doesn\u2019t give him a single likable trait.", "answer": "People Places Things", "sentence": "From its opening moments, \u201c People Places Things \u201d seems at odds with itself.", "paragraph_sentence": " From its opening moments, \u201c People Places Things \u201d seems at odds with itself. It is realistic about New York place names yet disconnected from reality. Will, who is handsome in an appealingly scruffy way, is a faithful husband with a warm, self-deprecating sense of humor and an acute roving intelligence. Only a fool would trade him for Gary, a glum, pudgy blob. Although this cowering, monosyllabic marshmallow makes several more appearances in the film, Mr. Strouse\u2019s screenplay doesn\u2019t give him a single likable trait.", "paragraph_answer": "From its opening moments, \u201c People Places Things \u201d seems at odds with itself. It is realistic about New York place names yet disconnected from reality. Will, who is handsome in an appealingly scruffy way, is a faithful husband with a warm, self-deprecating sense of humor and an acute roving intelligence. Only a fool would trade him for Gary, a glum, pudgy blob. Although this cowering, monosyllabic marshmallow makes several more appearances in the film, Mr. Strouse\u2019s screenplay doesn\u2019t give him a single likable trait.", "sentence_answer": "From its opening moments, \u201c People Places Things \u201d seems at odds with itself."} +{"question": "Where does Will move to?", "paragraph": "Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens, could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "answer": "Astoria, Queens", "sentence": "A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens , could possibly have seen in her.", "paragraph_sentence": "Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens , could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "paragraph_answer": "Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens , could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "sentence_answer": "A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens , could possibly have seen in her."} +{"question": "Who is the actress that plays Diane?", "paragraph": "Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens, could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "answer": "Regina Hall", "sentence": "After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane ( Regina Hall ), a teacher of American literature at Columbia.", "paragraph_sentence": "Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens, could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane ( Regina Hall ), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "paragraph_answer": "Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens, could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane ( Regina Hall ), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "sentence_answer": "After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane ( Regina Hall ), a teacher of American literature at Columbia."} +{"question": "What character does Jessica Williams play?", "paragraph": "Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens, could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "answer": "Kat", "sentence": "After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia.", "paragraph_sentence": "Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens, could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "paragraph_answer": "Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens, could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "sentence_answer": "After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia."} +{"question": "What character gets pregnant in the movie, People Places Things?", "paragraph": "Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens, could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "answer": "Charlie", "sentence": "Charlie speaks in double talk.", "paragraph_sentence": " Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens, could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "paragraph_answer": " Charlie speaks in double talk. Announcing the end of her marriage to Will, she says she loves him. \u201cThe problem is I don\u2019t love my life,\u201d she explains. A whiny, high-strung control freak and compulsive scold, she is such a pill that you wonder what the brokenhearted Will, who moves to Astoria, Queens, could possibly have seen in her. The story jumps ahead a year. After class one afternoon, Will is approached by Kat (Jessica Williams), a talented student who offers to introduce him to her beautiful 45-year-old mother, Diane (Regina Hall), a teacher of American literature at Columbia. When they meet, it is obvious that they are compatible. At the very moment when \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d has a chance to soar, it turns prissy, indecisive and picayune. The story meanders along with too-cute scenes of Will bonding with his daughters. Meanwhile, Charlie, now pregnant, plans to get married. As the movie fizzles, Mr. Clement\u2019s endearing performance breathes what little life is left into a movie that, much like the insufferable Charlie, can\u2019t make up its mind about where to go or how to get there. \u201cPeople Places Things\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). Language, mild sexual situations and brief nudity.", "sentence_answer": " Charlie speaks in double talk."} +{"question": "What was Stein's occupation?", "paragraph": "Stein, a modernist American writer who presided over one of the great avant-garde salons of all time in early-20th-century Paris, has rarely been anyone\u2019s idea of light entertainment.", "answer": "a modernist American writer", "sentence": "Stein, a modernist American writer who presided over one of the great avant-garde salons of all time in early-20th-century Paris, has rarely been anyone\u2019s idea of light entertainment.", "paragraph_sentence": " Stein, a modernist American writer who presided over one of the great avant-garde salons of all time in early-20th-century Paris, has rarely been anyone\u2019s idea of light entertainment. ", "paragraph_answer": "Stein, a modernist American writer who presided over one of the great avant-garde salons of all time in early-20th-century Paris, has rarely been anyone\u2019s idea of light entertainment.", "sentence_answer": "Stein, a modernist American writer who presided over one of the great avant-garde salons of all time in early-20th-century Paris, has rarely been anyone\u2019s idea of light entertainment."} +{"question": "When did Stein preside over the avant-garde salon?", "paragraph": "Stein, a modernist American writer who presided over one of the great avant-garde salons of all time in early-20th-century Paris, has rarely been anyone\u2019s idea of light entertainment.", "answer": "in early-20th-century", "sentence": "Stein, a modernist American writer who presided over one of the great avant-garde salons of all time in early-20th-century Paris, has rarely been anyone\u2019s idea of light entertainment.", "paragraph_sentence": " Stein, a modernist American writer who presided over one of the great avant-garde salons of all time in early-20th-century Paris, has rarely been anyone\u2019s idea of light entertainment. ", "paragraph_answer": "Stein, a modernist American writer who presided over one of the great avant-garde salons of all time in early-20th-century Paris, has rarely been anyone\u2019s idea of light entertainment.", "sentence_answer": "Stein, a modernist American writer who presided over one of the great avant-garde salons of all time in early-20th-century Paris, has rarely been anyone\u2019s idea of light entertainment."} +{"question": "What did Stein preside over?", "paragraph": "Stein, a modernist American writer who presided over one of the great avant-garde salons of all time in early-20th-century Paris, has rarely been anyone\u2019s idea of light entertainment.", "answer": "one of the great avant-garde salons of all time", "sentence": "Stein, a modernist American writer who presided over one of the great avant-garde salons of all time in early-20th-century Paris, has rarely been anyone\u2019s idea of light entertainment.", "paragraph_sentence": " Stein, a modernist American writer who presided over one of the great avant-garde salons of all time in early-20th-century Paris, has rarely been anyone\u2019s idea of light entertainment. ", "paragraph_answer": "Stein, a modernist American writer who presided over one of the great avant-garde salons of all time in early-20th-century Paris, has rarely been anyone\u2019s idea of light entertainment.", "sentence_answer": "Stein, a modernist American writer who presided over one of the great avant-garde salons of all time in early-20th-century Paris, has rarely been anyone\u2019s idea of light entertainment."} +{"question": "In what city was the avant-garde salon Stein presided over?", "paragraph": "Stein, a modernist American writer who presided over one of the great avant-garde salons of all time in early-20th-century Paris, has rarely been anyone\u2019s idea of light entertainment.", "answer": "Paris", "sentence": "Stein, a modernist American writer who presided over one of the great avant-garde salons of all time in early-20th-century Paris , has rarely been anyone\u2019s idea of light entertainment.", "paragraph_sentence": " Stein, a modernist American writer who presided over one of the great avant-garde salons of all time in early-20th-century Paris , has rarely been anyone\u2019s idea of light entertainment. ", "paragraph_answer": "Stein, a modernist American writer who presided over one of the great avant-garde salons of all time in early-20th-century Paris , has rarely been anyone\u2019s idea of light entertainment.", "sentence_answer": "Stein, a modernist American writer who presided over one of the great avant-garde salons of all time in early-20th-century Paris , has rarely been anyone\u2019s idea of light entertainment."} +{"question": "How long is the play?", "paragraph": "But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201cReread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids, they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "answer": "40-minute", "sentence": "But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense.", "paragraph_sentence": " But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201cReread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids, they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "paragraph_answer": "But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201cReread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids, they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "sentence_answer": "But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense."} +{"question": "What is the full title of the play mentioned in the article?", "paragraph": "But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201cReread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids, they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "answer": "Reread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School", "sentence": "Its full title, \u201c Reread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School ,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect.", "paragraph_sentence": "But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201c Reread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School ,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids, they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "paragraph_answer": "But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201c Reread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School ,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids, they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "sentence_answer": "Its full title, \u201c Reread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School ,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect."} +{"question": "In what year is the play from?", "paragraph": "But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201cReread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids, they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "answer": "1921", "sentence": "But this 40-minute play from 1921 , seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense.", "paragraph_sentence": " But this 40-minute play from 1921 , seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201cReread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids, they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "paragraph_answer": "But this 40-minute play from 1921 , seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201cReread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids, they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "sentence_answer": "But this 40-minute play from 1921 , seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense."} +{"question": "Who is David Herskovits?", "paragraph": "But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201cReread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids, they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "answer": "Target Margin artistic director", "sentence": "Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta.", "paragraph_sentence": "But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201cReread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids, they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "paragraph_answer": "But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201cReread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids, they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "sentence_answer": "Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta."} +{"question": "What were white plastic globes and shiny party hats used as?", "paragraph": "But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201cReread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids, they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "answer": "visual aids", "sentence": "Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids , they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "paragraph_sentence": "But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201cReread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids , they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters. ", "paragraph_answer": "But this 40-minute play from 1921, seldom seen or read outside academia, has an exhilarating air of discovery that finds the fun \u2014 and the sense \u2014 in her seeming nonsense. Its full title, \u201cReread Another A Play to Be Played Indoors or Out I Wish to Be a School,\u201d offers an accurate idea of what to expect. Staged by the Target Margin artistic director David Herskovits, a man celebrated for bringing cobwebbed theatrical arcana into the light, it is performed with tripping grace by Clare Barron, Purva Bedi and Ugo Chukwu (and a participatory sound man, Jesse Freedman), who wear kimonos and sailor stripes, suggesting extras from some hybrid Gilbert & Sullivan operetta. Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids , they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters.", "sentence_answer": "Using kitschy objects like white plastic globes and shiny party hats as visual aids , they speak in cryptic fragments of mountains and men and mothers and colorblind house painters."} +{"question": "What does the paragraph claim that once assembled the words suggest?", "paragraph": "There\u2019s probably not one you haven\u2019t heard before. If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day. Listen more carefully, though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers. Why, it\u2019s all gobbledygook. Except that something kind of wonderful has happened. These very pedestrian words seem to have sprouted wings, and resonate with surprising novelty. No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed. It\u2019s as if they\u2019d been born again as speakers of English.", "answer": "foreign language phrase books for travelers", "sentence": "Listen more carefully, though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers .", "paragraph_sentence": "There\u2019s probably not one you haven\u2019t heard before. If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day. Listen more carefully, though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers . Why, it\u2019s all gobbledygook. Except that something kind of wonderful has happened. These very pedestrian words seem to have sprouted wings, and resonate with surprising novelty. No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed. It\u2019s as if they\u2019d been born again as speakers of English.", "paragraph_answer": "There\u2019s probably not one you haven\u2019t heard before. If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day. Listen more carefully, though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers . Why, it\u2019s all gobbledygook. Except that something kind of wonderful has happened. These very pedestrian words seem to have sprouted wings, and resonate with surprising novelty. No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed. It\u2019s as if they\u2019d been born again as speakers of English.", "sentence_answer": "Listen more carefully, though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers ."} +{"question": "If you listen with half an ear how do the words sound combined?", "paragraph": "There\u2019s probably not one you haven\u2019t heard before. If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day. Listen more carefully, though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers. Why, it\u2019s all gobbledygook. Except that something kind of wonderful has happened. These very pedestrian words seem to have sprouted wings, and resonate with surprising novelty. No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed. It\u2019s as if they\u2019d been born again as speakers of English.", "answer": "like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day", "sentence": "If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day .", "paragraph_sentence": "There\u2019s probably not one you haven\u2019t heard before. If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day . Listen more carefully, though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers. Why, it\u2019s all gobbledygook. Except that something kind of wonderful has happened. These very pedestrian words seem to have sprouted wings, and resonate with surprising novelty. No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed. It\u2019s as if they\u2019d been born again as speakers of English.", "paragraph_answer": "There\u2019s probably not one you haven\u2019t heard before. If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day . Listen more carefully, though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers. Why, it\u2019s all gobbledygook. Except that something kind of wonderful has happened. These very pedestrian words seem to have sprouted wings, and resonate with surprising novelty. No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed. It\u2019s as if they\u2019d been born again as speakers of English.", "sentence_answer": "If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day ."} +{"question": "How many people are speaking the words referred to in the paragraph?", "paragraph": "There\u2019s probably not one you haven\u2019t heard before. If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day. Listen more carefully, though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers. Why, it\u2019s all gobbledygook. Except that something kind of wonderful has happened. These very pedestrian words seem to have sprouted wings, and resonate with surprising novelty. No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed. It\u2019s as if they\u2019d been born again as speakers of English.", "answer": "three people", "sentence": "No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed.", "paragraph_sentence": "There\u2019s probably not one you haven\u2019t heard before. If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day. Listen more carefully, though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers. Why, it\u2019s all gobbledygook. Except that something kind of wonderful has happened. These very pedestrian words seem to have sprouted wings, and resonate with surprising novelty. No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed. It\u2019s as if they\u2019d been born again as speakers of English.", "paragraph_answer": "There\u2019s probably not one you haven\u2019t heard before. If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day. Listen more carefully, though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers. Why, it\u2019s all gobbledygook. Except that something kind of wonderful has happened. These very pedestrian words seem to have sprouted wings, and resonate with surprising novelty. No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed. It\u2019s as if they\u2019d been born again as speakers of English.", "sentence_answer": "No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed."} +{"question": "In what way does the author suggest you listen to the words?", "paragraph": "There\u2019s probably not one you haven\u2019t heard before. If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day. Listen more carefully, though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers. Why, it\u2019s all gobbledygook. Except that something kind of wonderful has happened. These very pedestrian words seem to have sprouted wings, and resonate with surprising novelty. No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed. It\u2019s as if they\u2019d been born again as speakers of English.", "answer": "more carefully", "sentence": "Listen more carefully , though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers.", "paragraph_sentence": "There\u2019s probably not one you haven\u2019t heard before. If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day. Listen more carefully , though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers. Why, it\u2019s all gobbledygook. Except that something kind of wonderful has happened. These very pedestrian words seem to have sprouted wings, and resonate with surprising novelty. No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed. It\u2019s as if they\u2019d been born again as speakers of English.", "paragraph_answer": "There\u2019s probably not one you haven\u2019t heard before. If you listen with half an ear, they sound, in combination, like the ordinary sentences you overhear every day. Listen more carefully , though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers. Why, it\u2019s all gobbledygook. Except that something kind of wonderful has happened. These very pedestrian words seem to have sprouted wings, and resonate with surprising novelty. No wonder that the three people speaking them seem so delighted and perplexed. It\u2019s as if they\u2019d been born again as speakers of English.", "sentence_answer": "Listen more carefully , though, as these words are assembled into the exacting forms of declensions and syllogisms, or quaint questions and answers that suggest foreign language phrase books for travelers."} +{"question": "What is the bank removing?", "paragraph": "Policy makers need to do more to shift the economy away from investment and toward consumer demand and services. The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers. Because they could not earn much by depositing money in banks, a lot of Chinese families invested in risky real estate projects or the inflated stock market. Now, they should have better options. Because it is the world\u2019s second-biggest economy, China\u2019s monetary and fiscal policies increasingly matter to the rest of the world. If the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months, that could help to tip the already fragile global economy into another recession.", "answer": "limits on deposit rates", "sentence": "The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers.", "paragraph_sentence": "Policy makers need to do more to shift the economy away from investment and toward consumer demand and services. The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers. Because they could not earn much by depositing money in banks, a lot of Chinese families invested in risky real estate projects or the inflated stock market. Now, they should have better options. Because it is the world\u2019s second-biggest economy, China\u2019s monetary and fiscal policies increasingly matter to the rest of the world. If the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months, that could help to tip the already fragile global economy into another recession.", "paragraph_answer": "Policy makers need to do more to shift the economy away from investment and toward consumer demand and services. The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers. Because they could not earn much by depositing money in banks, a lot of Chinese families invested in risky real estate projects or the inflated stock market. Now, they should have better options. Because it is the world\u2019s second-biggest economy, China\u2019s monetary and fiscal policies increasingly matter to the rest of the world. If the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months, that could help to tip the already fragile global economy into another recession.", "sentence_answer": "The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers."} +{"question": "What will attract savers?", "paragraph": "Policy makers need to do more to shift the economy away from investment and toward consumer demand and services. The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers. Because they could not earn much by depositing money in banks, a lot of Chinese families invested in risky real estate projects or the inflated stock market. Now, they should have better options. Because it is the world\u2019s second-biggest economy, China\u2019s monetary and fiscal policies increasingly matter to the rest of the world. If the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months, that could help to tip the already fragile global economy into another recession.", "answer": "banks to compete with one another", "sentence": "The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers.", "paragraph_sentence": "Policy makers need to do more to shift the economy away from investment and toward consumer demand and services. The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers. Because they could not earn much by depositing money in banks, a lot of Chinese families invested in risky real estate projects or the inflated stock market. Now, they should have better options. Because it is the world\u2019s second-biggest economy, China\u2019s monetary and fiscal policies increasingly matter to the rest of the world. If the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months, that could help to tip the already fragile global economy into another recession.", "paragraph_answer": "Policy makers need to do more to shift the economy away from investment and toward consumer demand and services. The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers. Because they could not earn much by depositing money in banks, a lot of Chinese families invested in risky real estate projects or the inflated stock market. Now, they should have better options. Because it is the world\u2019s second-biggest economy, China\u2019s monetary and fiscal policies increasingly matter to the rest of the world. If the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months, that could help to tip the already fragile global economy into another recession.", "sentence_answer": "The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers."} +{"question": "Who invested in risky real estate projects?", "paragraph": "Policy makers need to do more to shift the economy away from investment and toward consumer demand and services. The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers. Because they could not earn much by depositing money in banks, a lot of Chinese families invested in risky real estate projects or the inflated stock market. Now, they should have better options. Because it is the world\u2019s second-biggest economy, China\u2019s monetary and fiscal policies increasingly matter to the rest of the world. If the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months, that could help to tip the already fragile global economy into another recession.", "answer": "Chinese families", "sentence": "Because they could not earn much by depositing money in banks, a lot of Chinese families invested in risky real estate projects or the inflated stock market.", "paragraph_sentence": "Policy makers need to do more to shift the economy away from investment and toward consumer demand and services. The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers. Because they could not earn much by depositing money in banks, a lot of Chinese families invested in risky real estate projects or the inflated stock market. Now, they should have better options. Because it is the world\u2019s second-biggest economy, China\u2019s monetary and fiscal policies increasingly matter to the rest of the world. If the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months, that could help to tip the already fragile global economy into another recession.", "paragraph_answer": "Policy makers need to do more to shift the economy away from investment and toward consumer demand and services. The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers. Because they could not earn much by depositing money in banks, a lot of Chinese families invested in risky real estate projects or the inflated stock market. Now, they should have better options. Because it is the world\u2019s second-biggest economy, China\u2019s monetary and fiscal policies increasingly matter to the rest of the world. If the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months, that could help to tip the already fragile global economy into another recession.", "sentence_answer": "Because they could not earn much by depositing money in banks, a lot of Chinese families invested in risky real estate projects or the inflated stock market."} +{"question": "Who has the second biggest economy?", "paragraph": "Policy makers need to do more to shift the economy away from investment and toward consumer demand and services. The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers. Because they could not earn much by depositing money in banks, a lot of Chinese families invested in risky real estate projects or the inflated stock market. Now, they should have better options. Because it is the world\u2019s second-biggest economy, China\u2019s monetary and fiscal policies increasingly matter to the rest of the world. If the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months, that could help to tip the already fragile global economy into another recession.", "answer": "China", "sentence": "Because it is the world\u2019s second-biggest economy, China \u2019s monetary and fiscal policies increasingly matter to the rest of the world.", "paragraph_sentence": "Policy makers need to do more to shift the economy away from investment and toward consumer demand and services. The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers. Because they could not earn much by depositing money in banks, a lot of Chinese families invested in risky real estate projects or the inflated stock market. Now, they should have better options. Because it is the world\u2019s second-biggest economy, China \u2019s monetary and fiscal policies increasingly matter to the rest of the world. If the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months, that could help to tip the already fragile global economy into another recession.", "paragraph_answer": "Policy makers need to do more to shift the economy away from investment and toward consumer demand and services. The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers. Because they could not earn much by depositing money in banks, a lot of Chinese families invested in risky real estate projects or the inflated stock market. Now, they should have better options. Because it is the world\u2019s second-biggest economy, China \u2019s monetary and fiscal policies increasingly matter to the rest of the world. If the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months, that could help to tip the already fragile global economy into another recession.", "sentence_answer": "Because it is the world\u2019s second-biggest economy, China \u2019s monetary and fiscal policies increasingly matter to the rest of the world."} +{"question": "What could cause another recession?", "paragraph": "Policy makers need to do more to shift the economy away from investment and toward consumer demand and services. The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers. Because they could not earn much by depositing money in banks, a lot of Chinese families invested in risky real estate projects or the inflated stock market. Now, they should have better options. Because it is the world\u2019s second-biggest economy, China\u2019s monetary and fiscal policies increasingly matter to the rest of the world. If the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months, that could help to tip the already fragile global economy into another recession.", "answer": "the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months", "sentence": "If the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months , that could help to tip the already fragile global economy into another recession.", "paragraph_sentence": "Policy makers need to do more to shift the economy away from investment and toward consumer demand and services. The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers. Because they could not earn much by depositing money in banks, a lot of Chinese families invested in risky real estate projects or the inflated stock market. Now, they should have better options. Because it is the world\u2019s second-biggest economy, China\u2019s monetary and fiscal policies increasingly matter to the rest of the world. If the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months , that could help to tip the already fragile global economy into another recession. ", "paragraph_answer": "Policy makers need to do more to shift the economy away from investment and toward consumer demand and services. The central bank\u2019s decision to remove limits on deposit rates is a good step in that direction, because it should force banks to compete with one another to attract savers. Because they could not earn much by depositing money in banks, a lot of Chinese families invested in risky real estate projects or the inflated stock market. Now, they should have better options. Because it is the world\u2019s second-biggest economy, China\u2019s monetary and fiscal policies increasingly matter to the rest of the world. If the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months , that could help to tip the already fragile global economy into another recession.", "sentence_answer": "If the country\u2019s growth slows sharply in the coming months , that could help to tip the already fragile global economy into another recession."} +{"question": "What year school s Trimble in?", "paragraph": "Dez Wells and Jake Layman each scored 14 for the Terrapins (22-5, 10-4 Big Ten), who were locked in a tie game with 5 minutes 38 seconds left before Trimble took over. After Wells made two free throws, Trimble narrowly beat the shot clock with a jump shot from the top of the key. Trimble, a freshman guard, connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead. ARIZONA 87, U.S.C. 57 Kaleb Tarczewski scored 15 points, Stanley Johnson added 13, and No. 7 Arizona routed visiting Southern California. Arizona (23-3, 11-2 Pacific-12) led the Trojans (10-16, 2-12) by 18 at halftime and cruised to its 35th straight home victory.", "answer": "freshman", "sentence": "Trimble, a freshman guard, connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead.", "paragraph_sentence": "Dez Wells and Jake Layman each scored 14 for the Terrapins (22-5, 10-4 Big Ten), who were locked in a tie game with 5 minutes 38 seconds left before Trimble took over. After Wells made two free throws, Trimble narrowly beat the shot clock with a jump shot from the top of the key. Trimble, a freshman guard, connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead. ARIZONA 87, U.S.C. 57 Kaleb Tarczewski scored 15 points, Stanley Johnson added 13, and No. 7 Arizona routed visiting Southern California. Arizona (23-3, 11-2 Pacific-12) led the Trojans (10-16, 2-12) by 18 at halftime and cruised to its 35th straight home victory.", "paragraph_answer": "Dez Wells and Jake Layman each scored 14 for the Terrapins (22-5, 10-4 Big Ten), who were locked in a tie game with 5 minutes 38 seconds left before Trimble took over. After Wells made two free throws, Trimble narrowly beat the shot clock with a jump shot from the top of the key. Trimble, a freshman guard, connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead. ARIZONA 87, U.S.C. 57 Kaleb Tarczewski scored 15 points, Stanley Johnson added 13, and No. 7 Arizona routed visiting Southern California. Arizona (23-3, 11-2 Pacific-12) led the Trojans (10-16, 2-12) by 18 at halftime and cruised to its 35th straight home victory.", "sentence_answer": "Trimble, a freshman guard, connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead."} +{"question": "Who won the game?", "paragraph": "Dez Wells and Jake Layman each scored 14 for the Terrapins (22-5, 10-4 Big Ten), who were locked in a tie game with 5 minutes 38 seconds left before Trimble took over. After Wells made two free throws, Trimble narrowly beat the shot clock with a jump shot from the top of the key. Trimble, a freshman guard, connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead. ARIZONA 87, U.S.C. 57 Kaleb Tarczewski scored 15 points, Stanley Johnson added 13, and No. 7 Arizona routed visiting Southern California. Arizona (23-3, 11-2 Pacific-12) led the Trojans (10-16, 2-12) by 18 at halftime and cruised to its 35th straight home victory.", "answer": "Arizona (23-3, 11-2 Pacific-12) led the Trojans (10-16, 2-12) by 18 at halftime and cruised to its 35th straight home victory.", "sentence": "Arizona (23-3, 11-2 Pacific-12) led the Trojans (10-16, 2-12) by 18 at halftime and cruised to its 35th straight home victory.", "paragraph_sentence": "Dez Wells and Jake Layman each scored 14 for the Terrapins (22-5, 10-4 Big Ten), who were locked in a tie game with 5 minutes 38 seconds left before Trimble took over. After Wells made two free throws, Trimble narrowly beat the shot clock with a jump shot from the top of the key. Trimble, a freshman guard, connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead. ARIZONA 87, U.S.C. 57 Kaleb Tarczewski scored 15 points, Stanley Johnson added 13, and No. 7 Arizona routed visiting Southern California. Arizona (23-3, 11-2 Pacific-12) led the Trojans (10-16, 2-12) by 18 at halftime and cruised to its 35th straight home victory. ", "paragraph_answer": "Dez Wells and Jake Layman each scored 14 for the Terrapins (22-5, 10-4 Big Ten), who were locked in a tie game with 5 minutes 38 seconds left before Trimble took over. After Wells made two free throws, Trimble narrowly beat the shot clock with a jump shot from the top of the key. Trimble, a freshman guard, connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead. ARIZONA 87, U.S.C. 57 Kaleb Tarczewski scored 15 points, Stanley Johnson added 13, and No. 7 Arizona routed visiting Southern California. Arizona (23-3, 11-2 Pacific-12) led the Trojans (10-16, 2-12) by 18 at halftime and cruised to its 35th straight home victory. ", "sentence_answer": " Arizona (23-3, 11-2 Pacific-12) led the Trojans (10-16, 2-12) by 18 at halftime and cruised to its 35th straight home victory. "} +{"question": "What position does Trimble play?", "paragraph": "Dez Wells and Jake Layman each scored 14 for the Terrapins (22-5, 10-4 Big Ten), who were locked in a tie game with 5 minutes 38 seconds left before Trimble took over. After Wells made two free throws, Trimble narrowly beat the shot clock with a jump shot from the top of the key. Trimble, a freshman guard, connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead. ARIZONA 87, U.S.C. 57 Kaleb Tarczewski scored 15 points, Stanley Johnson added 13, and No. 7 Arizona routed visiting Southern California. Arizona (23-3, 11-2 Pacific-12) led the Trojans (10-16, 2-12) by 18 at halftime and cruised to its 35th straight home victory.", "answer": "guard", "sentence": "Trimble, a freshman guard , connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead.", "paragraph_sentence": "Dez Wells and Jake Layman each scored 14 for the Terrapins (22-5, 10-4 Big Ten), who were locked in a tie game with 5 minutes 38 seconds left before Trimble took over. After Wells made two free throws, Trimble narrowly beat the shot clock with a jump shot from the top of the key. Trimble, a freshman guard , connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead. ARIZONA 87, U.S.C. 57 Kaleb Tarczewski scored 15 points, Stanley Johnson added 13, and No. 7 Arizona routed visiting Southern California. Arizona (23-3, 11-2 Pacific-12) led the Trojans (10-16, 2-12) by 18 at halftime and cruised to its 35th straight home victory.", "paragraph_answer": "Dez Wells and Jake Layman each scored 14 for the Terrapins (22-5, 10-4 Big Ten), who were locked in a tie game with 5 minutes 38 seconds left before Trimble took over. After Wells made two free throws, Trimble narrowly beat the shot clock with a jump shot from the top of the key. Trimble, a freshman guard , connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead. ARIZONA 87, U.S.C. 57 Kaleb Tarczewski scored 15 points, Stanley Johnson added 13, and No. 7 Arizona routed visiting Southern California. Arizona (23-3, 11-2 Pacific-12) led the Trojans (10-16, 2-12) by 18 at halftime and cruised to its 35th straight home victory.", "sentence_answer": "Trimble, a freshman guard , connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead."} +{"question": "What was the point difference in the score?", "paragraph": "Dez Wells and Jake Layman each scored 14 for the Terrapins (22-5, 10-4 Big Ten), who were locked in a tie game with 5 minutes 38 seconds left before Trimble took over. After Wells made two free throws, Trimble narrowly beat the shot clock with a jump shot from the top of the key. Trimble, a freshman guard, connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead. ARIZONA 87, U.S.C. 57 Kaleb Tarczewski scored 15 points, Stanley Johnson added 13, and No. 7 Arizona routed visiting Southern California. Arizona (23-3, 11-2 Pacific-12) led the Trojans (10-16, 2-12) by 18 at halftime and cruised to its 35th straight home victory.", "answer": "62-54", "sentence": "Trimble, a freshman guard, connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead.", "paragraph_sentence": "Dez Wells and Jake Layman each scored 14 for the Terrapins (22-5, 10-4 Big Ten), who were locked in a tie game with 5 minutes 38 seconds left before Trimble took over. After Wells made two free throws, Trimble narrowly beat the shot clock with a jump shot from the top of the key. Trimble, a freshman guard, connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead. ARIZONA 87, U.S.C. 57 Kaleb Tarczewski scored 15 points, Stanley Johnson added 13, and No. 7 Arizona routed visiting Southern California. Arizona (23-3, 11-2 Pacific-12) led the Trojans (10-16, 2-12) by 18 at halftime and cruised to its 35th straight home victory.", "paragraph_answer": "Dez Wells and Jake Layman each scored 14 for the Terrapins (22-5, 10-4 Big Ten), who were locked in a tie game with 5 minutes 38 seconds left before Trimble took over. After Wells made two free throws, Trimble narrowly beat the shot clock with a jump shot from the top of the key. Trimble, a freshman guard, connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead. ARIZONA 87, U.S.C. 57 Kaleb Tarczewski scored 15 points, Stanley Johnson added 13, and No. 7 Arizona routed visiting Southern California. Arizona (23-3, 11-2 Pacific-12) led the Trojans (10-16, 2-12) by 18 at halftime and cruised to its 35th straight home victory.", "sentence_answer": "Trimble, a freshman guard, connected again from 3-point range with 2:18 remaining for a 62-54 lead."} +{"question": "What was the streak of winning games?", "paragraph": "S.M.U. 67, TEMPLE 58 Nic Moore scored 18 points, and No. 21 Southern Methodist (22-5, 13-2 American Athletic Conference) rallied from 10 points down in the second half to end a seven-game winning streak by visiting Temple (19-8, 10-4). Women NOTRE DAME 71, GEORGIA TECH 61 Jewell Loyd scored 31 points and No. 4 Notre Dame survived a scare to beat host Georgia Tech (14-13, 4-9 Atlantic Coast Conference) for its 11th straight win. The Irish (25-2, 12-1) trailed by 34-33 at halftime, and the final margin was the only double-digit lead of the game.", "answer": "seven-game", "sentence": "Nic Moore scored 18 points, and No. 21 Southern Methodist (22-5, 13-2 American Athletic Conference) rallied from 10 points down in the second half to end a seven-game winning streak by visiting Temple (19-8, 10-4).", "paragraph_sentence": "S.M.U. 67, TEMPLE 58 Nic Moore scored 18 points, and No. 21 Southern Methodist (22-5, 13-2 American Athletic Conference) rallied from 10 points down in the second half to end a seven-game winning streak by visiting Temple (19-8, 10-4). Women NOTRE DAME 71, GEORGIA TECH 61 Jewell Loyd scored 31 points and No. 4 Notre Dame survived a scare to beat host Georgia Tech (14-13, 4-9 Atlantic Coast Conference) for its 11th straight win. The Irish (25-2, 12-1) trailed by 34-33 at halftime, and the final margin was the only double-digit lead of the game.", "paragraph_answer": "S.M.U. 67, TEMPLE 58 Nic Moore scored 18 points, and No. 21 Southern Methodist (22-5, 13-2 American Athletic Conference) rallied from 10 points down in the second half to end a seven-game winning streak by visiting Temple (19-8, 10-4). Women NOTRE DAME 71, GEORGIA TECH 61 Jewell Loyd scored 31 points and No. 4 Notre Dame survived a scare to beat host Georgia Tech (14-13, 4-9 Atlantic Coast Conference) for its 11th straight win. The Irish (25-2, 12-1) trailed by 34-33 at halftime, and the final margin was the only double-digit lead of the game.", "sentence_answer": "Nic Moore scored 18 points, and No. 21 Southern Methodist (22-5, 13-2 American Athletic Conference) rallied from 10 points down in the second half to end a seven-game winning streak by visiting Temple (19-8, 10-4)."} +{"question": "How many games did Notre Dame win in a row?", "paragraph": "S.M.U. 67, TEMPLE 58 Nic Moore scored 18 points, and No. 21 Southern Methodist (22-5, 13-2 American Athletic Conference) rallied from 10 points down in the second half to end a seven-game winning streak by visiting Temple (19-8, 10-4). Women NOTRE DAME 71, GEORGIA TECH 61 Jewell Loyd scored 31 points and No. 4 Notre Dame survived a scare to beat host Georgia Tech (14-13, 4-9 Atlantic Coast Conference) for its 11th straight win. The Irish (25-2, 12-1) trailed by 34-33 at halftime, and the final margin was the only double-digit lead of the game.", "answer": "11th straight win", "sentence": "its 11th straight win .", "paragraph_sentence": "S.M.U. 67, TEMPLE 58 Nic Moore scored 18 points, and No. 21 Southern Methodist (22-5, 13-2 American Athletic Conference) rallied from 10 points down in the second half to end a seven-game winning streak by visiting Temple (19-8, 10-4). Women NOTRE DAME 71, GEORGIA TECH 61 Jewell Loyd scored 31 points and No. 4 Notre Dame survived a scare to beat host Georgia Tech (14-13, 4-9 Atlantic Coast Conference) for its 11th straight win . The Irish (25-2, 12-1) trailed by 34-33 at halftime, and the final margin was the only double-digit lead of the game.", "paragraph_answer": "S.M.U. 67, TEMPLE 58 Nic Moore scored 18 points, and No. 21 Southern Methodist (22-5, 13-2 American Athletic Conference) rallied from 10 points down in the second half to end a seven-game winning streak by visiting Temple (19-8, 10-4). Women NOTRE DAME 71, GEORGIA TECH 61 Jewell Loyd scored 31 points and No. 4 Notre Dame survived a scare to beat host Georgia Tech (14-13, 4-9 Atlantic Coast Conference) for its 11th straight win . The Irish (25-2, 12-1) trailed by 34-33 at halftime, and the final margin was the only double-digit lead of the game.", "sentence_answer": "its 11th straight win ."} +{"question": "How many points did Nic Moore score?", "paragraph": "S.M.U. 67, TEMPLE 58 Nic Moore scored 18 points, and No. 21 Southern Methodist (22-5, 13-2 American Athletic Conference) rallied from 10 points down in the second half to end a seven-game winning streak by visiting Temple (19-8, 10-4). Women NOTRE DAME 71, GEORGIA TECH 61 Jewell Loyd scored 31 points and No. 4 Notre Dame survived a scare to beat host Georgia Tech (14-13, 4-9 Atlantic Coast Conference) for its 11th straight win. The Irish (25-2, 12-1) trailed by 34-33 at halftime, and the final margin was the only double-digit lead of the game.", "answer": "18 points", "sentence": "Nic Moore scored 18 points , and No. 21 Southern Methodist (22-5, 13-2 American Athletic Conference) rallied from 10 points down in the second half to end a seven-game winning streak by visiting Temple (19-8, 10-4).", "paragraph_sentence": "S.M.U. 67, TEMPLE 58 Nic Moore scored 18 points , and No. 21 Southern Methodist (22-5, 13-2 American Athletic Conference) rallied from 10 points down in the second half to end a seven-game winning streak by visiting Temple (19-8, 10-4). Women NOTRE DAME 71, GEORGIA TECH 61 Jewell Loyd scored 31 points and No. 4 Notre Dame survived a scare to beat host Georgia Tech (14-13, 4-9 Atlantic Coast Conference) for its 11th straight win. The Irish (25-2, 12-1) trailed by 34-33 at halftime, and the final margin was the only double-digit lead of the game.", "paragraph_answer": "S.M.U. 67, TEMPLE 58 Nic Moore scored 18 points , and No. 21 Southern Methodist (22-5, 13-2 American Athletic Conference) rallied from 10 points down in the second half to end a seven-game winning streak by visiting Temple (19-8, 10-4). Women NOTRE DAME 71, GEORGIA TECH 61 Jewell Loyd scored 31 points and No. 4 Notre Dame survived a scare to beat host Georgia Tech (14-13, 4-9 Atlantic Coast Conference) for its 11th straight win. The Irish (25-2, 12-1) trailed by 34-33 at halftime, and the final margin was the only double-digit lead of the game.", "sentence_answer": "Nic Moore scored 18 points , and No. 21 Southern Methodist (22-5, 13-2 American Athletic Conference) rallied from 10 points down in the second half to end a seven-game winning streak by visiting Temple (19-8, 10-4)."} +{"question": "How many points were the Irish behind at halftime?", "paragraph": "S.M.U. 67, TEMPLE 58 Nic Moore scored 18 points, and No. 21 Southern Methodist (22-5, 13-2 American Athletic Conference) rallied from 10 points down in the second half to end a seven-game winning streak by visiting Temple (19-8, 10-4). Women NOTRE DAME 71, GEORGIA TECH 61 Jewell Loyd scored 31 points and No. 4 Notre Dame survived a scare to beat host Georgia Tech (14-13, 4-9 Atlantic Coast Conference) for its 11th straight win. The Irish (25-2, 12-1) trailed by 34-33 at halftime, and the final margin was the only double-digit lead of the game.", "answer": "trailed by 34-33 at halftime", "sentence": "The Irish (25-2, 12-1) trailed by 34-33 at halftime , and the final margin was the only double-digit lead of the game.", "paragraph_sentence": "S.M.U. 67, TEMPLE 58 Nic Moore scored 18 points, and No. 21 Southern Methodist (22-5, 13-2 American Athletic Conference) rallied from 10 points down in the second half to end a seven-game winning streak by visiting Temple (19-8, 10-4). Women NOTRE DAME 71, GEORGIA TECH 61 Jewell Loyd scored 31 points and No. 4 Notre Dame survived a scare to beat host Georgia Tech (14-13, 4-9 Atlantic Coast Conference) for its 11th straight win. The Irish (25-2, 12-1) trailed by 34-33 at halftime , and the final margin was the only double-digit lead of the game. ", "paragraph_answer": "S.M.U. 67, TEMPLE 58 Nic Moore scored 18 points, and No. 21 Southern Methodist (22-5, 13-2 American Athletic Conference) rallied from 10 points down in the second half to end a seven-game winning streak by visiting Temple (19-8, 10-4). Women NOTRE DAME 71, GEORGIA TECH 61 Jewell Loyd scored 31 points and No. 4 Notre Dame survived a scare to beat host Georgia Tech (14-13, 4-9 Atlantic Coast Conference) for its 11th straight win. The Irish (25-2, 12-1) trailed by 34-33 at halftime , and the final margin was the only double-digit lead of the game.", "sentence_answer": "The Irish (25-2, 12-1) trailed by 34-33 at halftime , and the final margin was the only double-digit lead of the game."} +{"question": "Who did fans wait for long periods of time to see?", "paragraph": "For fans of a certain kind of animation, Monty Oum was the Wizard \u2014 and the King, the Knight and the Pawn, all rolled into one. Millions of people watched his web series \u201cRed vs. Blue\u201d and \u201cRWBY.\u201d At conventions, thousands of fans, sometimes dolled up in the outfits of fantasy characters he created, waited for hours just to meet him. Even in a scene known for its colorful personalities, Mr. Oum stood out. Clad in often over-the-top anime-style costumes \u2014 platinum wigs, rubber vests \u2014 with an unabashed energy and a robust work ethic, he served as an inspiration to audiences weaned on a D.I.Y. techno-culture.", "answer": "Monty Oum", "sentence": "For fans of a certain kind of animation, Monty Oum was the Wizard \u2014 and the King, the Knight and the Pawn, all rolled into one.", "paragraph_sentence": " For fans of a certain kind of animation, Monty Oum was the Wizard \u2014 and the King, the Knight and the Pawn, all rolled into one. Millions of people watched his web series \u201cRed vs. Blue\u201d and \u201cRWBY.\u201d At conventions, thousands of fans, sometimes dolled up in the outfits of fantasy characters he created, waited for hours just to meet him. Even in a scene known for its colorful personalities, Mr. Oum stood out. Clad in often over-the-top anime-style costumes \u2014 platinum wigs, rubber vests \u2014 with an unabashed energy and a robust work ethic, he served as an inspiration to audiences weaned on a D.I.Y. techno-culture.", "paragraph_answer": "For fans of a certain kind of animation, Monty Oum was the Wizard \u2014 and the King, the Knight and the Pawn, all rolled into one. Millions of people watched his web series \u201cRed vs. Blue\u201d and \u201cRWBY.\u201d At conventions, thousands of fans, sometimes dolled up in the outfits of fantasy characters he created, waited for hours just to meet him. Even in a scene known for its colorful personalities, Mr. Oum stood out. Clad in often over-the-top anime-style costumes \u2014 platinum wigs, rubber vests \u2014 with an unabashed energy and a robust work ethic, he served as an inspiration to audiences weaned on a D.I.Y. techno-culture.", "sentence_answer": "For fans of a certain kind of animation, Monty Oum was the Wizard \u2014 and the King, the Knight and the Pawn, all rolled into one."} +{"question": "What was the name of the Halo web series that Monty Oum created?", "paragraph": "For fans of a certain kind of animation, Monty Oum was the Wizard \u2014 and the King, the Knight and the Pawn, all rolled into one. Millions of people watched his web series \u201cRed vs. Blue\u201d and \u201cRWBY.\u201d At conventions, thousands of fans, sometimes dolled up in the outfits of fantasy characters he created, waited for hours just to meet him. Even in a scene known for its colorful personalities, Mr. Oum stood out. Clad in often over-the-top anime-style costumes \u2014 platinum wigs, rubber vests \u2014 with an unabashed energy and a robust work ethic, he served as an inspiration to audiences weaned on a D.I.Y. techno-culture.", "answer": "Red vs. Blue", "sentence": "Millions of people watched his web series \u201c Red vs. Blue \u201d and \u201cRWBY.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "For fans of a certain kind of animation, Monty Oum was the Wizard \u2014 and the King, the Knight and the Pawn, all rolled into one. Millions of people watched his web series \u201c Red vs. Blue \u201d and \u201cRWBY.\u201d At conventions, thousands of fans, sometimes dolled up in the outfits of fantasy characters he created, waited for hours just to meet him. Even in a scene known for its colorful personalities, Mr. Oum stood out. Clad in often over-the-top anime-style costumes \u2014 platinum wigs, rubber vests \u2014 with an unabashed energy and a robust work ethic, he served as an inspiration to audiences weaned on a D.I.Y. techno-culture.", "paragraph_answer": "For fans of a certain kind of animation, Monty Oum was the Wizard \u2014 and the King, the Knight and the Pawn, all rolled into one. Millions of people watched his web series \u201c Red vs. Blue \u201d and \u201cRWBY.\u201d At conventions, thousands of fans, sometimes dolled up in the outfits of fantasy characters he created, waited for hours just to meet him. Even in a scene known for its colorful personalities, Mr. Oum stood out. Clad in often over-the-top anime-style costumes \u2014 platinum wigs, rubber vests \u2014 with an unabashed energy and a robust work ethic, he served as an inspiration to audiences weaned on a D.I.Y. techno-culture.", "sentence_answer": "Millions of people watched his web series \u201c Red vs. Blue \u201d and \u201cRWBY.\u201d"} +{"question": "What kinds of costumes did Monty Oum like to wear to conventions?", "paragraph": "For fans of a certain kind of animation, Monty Oum was the Wizard \u2014 and the King, the Knight and the Pawn, all rolled into one. Millions of people watched his web series \u201cRed vs. Blue\u201d and \u201cRWBY.\u201d At conventions, thousands of fans, sometimes dolled up in the outfits of fantasy characters he created, waited for hours just to meet him. Even in a scene known for its colorful personalities, Mr. Oum stood out. Clad in often over-the-top anime-style costumes \u2014 platinum wigs, rubber vests \u2014 with an unabashed energy and a robust work ethic, he served as an inspiration to audiences weaned on a D.I.Y. techno-culture.", "answer": "anime", "sentence": "Clad in often over-the-top anime -style costumes \u2014 platinum wigs, rubber vests \u2014 with an unabashed energy and a robust work ethic, he served as an inspiration to audiences weaned on a D.I.Y. techno-culture.", "paragraph_sentence": "For fans of a certain kind of animation, Monty Oum was the Wizard \u2014 and the King, the Knight and the Pawn, all rolled into one. Millions of people watched his web series \u201cRed vs. Blue\u201d and \u201cRWBY.\u201d At conventions, thousands of fans, sometimes dolled up in the outfits of fantasy characters he created, waited for hours just to meet him. Even in a scene known for its colorful personalities, Mr. Oum stood out. Clad in often over-the-top anime -style costumes \u2014 platinum wigs, rubber vests \u2014 with an unabashed energy and a robust work ethic, he served as an inspiration to audiences weaned on a D.I.Y. techno-culture. ", "paragraph_answer": "For fans of a certain kind of animation, Monty Oum was the Wizard \u2014 and the King, the Knight and the Pawn, all rolled into one. Millions of people watched his web series \u201cRed vs. Blue\u201d and \u201cRWBY.\u201d At conventions, thousands of fans, sometimes dolled up in the outfits of fantasy characters he created, waited for hours just to meet him. Even in a scene known for its colorful personalities, Mr. Oum stood out. Clad in often over-the-top anime -style costumes \u2014 platinum wigs, rubber vests \u2014 with an unabashed energy and a robust work ethic, he served as an inspiration to audiences weaned on a D.I.Y. techno-culture.", "sentence_answer": "Clad in often over-the-top anime -style costumes \u2014 platinum wigs, rubber vests \u2014 with an unabashed energy and a robust work ethic, he served as an inspiration to audiences weaned on a D.I.Y. techno-culture."} +{"question": "How many people watched the web series that Monty Oum developed?", "paragraph": "For fans of a certain kind of animation, Monty Oum was the Wizard \u2014 and the King, the Knight and the Pawn, all rolled into one. Millions of people watched his web series \u201cRed vs. Blue\u201d and \u201cRWBY.\u201d At conventions, thousands of fans, sometimes dolled up in the outfits of fantasy characters he created, waited for hours just to meet him. Even in a scene known for its colorful personalities, Mr. Oum stood out. Clad in often over-the-top anime-style costumes \u2014 platinum wigs, rubber vests \u2014 with an unabashed energy and a robust work ethic, he served as an inspiration to audiences weaned on a D.I.Y. techno-culture.", "answer": "Millions", "sentence": "Millions of people watched his web series \u201cRed vs. Blue\u201d and \u201cRWBY.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "For fans of a certain kind of animation, Monty Oum was the Wizard \u2014 and the King, the Knight and the Pawn, all rolled into one. Millions of people watched his web series \u201cRed vs. Blue\u201d and \u201cRWBY.\u201d At conventions, thousands of fans, sometimes dolled up in the outfits of fantasy characters he created, waited for hours just to meet him. Even in a scene known for its colorful personalities, Mr. Oum stood out. Clad in often over-the-top anime-style costumes \u2014 platinum wigs, rubber vests \u2014 with an unabashed energy and a robust work ethic, he served as an inspiration to audiences weaned on a D.I.Y. techno-culture.", "paragraph_answer": "For fans of a certain kind of animation, Monty Oum was the Wizard \u2014 and the King, the Knight and the Pawn, all rolled into one. Millions of people watched his web series \u201cRed vs. Blue\u201d and \u201cRWBY.\u201d At conventions, thousands of fans, sometimes dolled up in the outfits of fantasy characters he created, waited for hours just to meet him. Even in a scene known for its colorful personalities, Mr. Oum stood out. Clad in often over-the-top anime-style costumes \u2014 platinum wigs, rubber vests \u2014 with an unabashed energy and a robust work ethic, he served as an inspiration to audiences weaned on a D.I.Y. techno-culture.", "sentence_answer": " Millions of people watched his web series \u201cRed vs. Blue\u201d and \u201cRWBY.\u201d"} +{"question": "Who is the Rangers Goalie coach", "paragraph": "During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire, the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots. Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career. If anyone could notice anything wrong with Lundqvist, his positioning or his technique, it would be Allaire. Near the end of practice, Lundqvist crouched and began stretching again as Allaire chatted with him. Then Lundqvist left the ice, 62 minutes after he had arrived. As he undressed at his locker, a horde of news media members huddled around him. Lundqvist is the Rangers\u2019 star, and Wednesday\u2019s game rests more on him than on anyone else. He was asked if he was ever nervous before games like this.", "answer": "Benoit Allaire", "sentence": "During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire , the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots.", "paragraph_sentence": " During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire , the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots. Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career. If anyone could notice anything wrong with Lundqvist, his positioning or his technique, it would be Allaire. Near the end of practice, Lundqvist crouched and began stretching again as Allaire chatted with him. Then Lundqvist left the ice, 62 minutes after he had arrived. As he undressed at his locker, a horde of news media members huddled around him. Lundqvist is the Rangers\u2019 star, and Wednesday\u2019s game rests more on him than on anyone else. He was asked if he was ever nervous before games like this.", "paragraph_answer": "During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire , the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots. Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career. If anyone could notice anything wrong with Lundqvist, his positioning or his technique, it would be Allaire. Near the end of practice, Lundqvist crouched and began stretching again as Allaire chatted with him. Then Lundqvist left the ice, 62 minutes after he had arrived. As he undressed at his locker, a horde of news media members huddled around him. Lundqvist is the Rangers\u2019 star, and Wednesday\u2019s game rests more on him than on anyone else. He was asked if he was ever nervous before games like this.", "sentence_answer": "During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire , the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots."} +{"question": "How long has Lundqvist had is goalie coach?", "paragraph": "During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire, the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots. Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career. If anyone could notice anything wrong with Lundqvist, his positioning or his technique, it would be Allaire. Near the end of practice, Lundqvist crouched and began stretching again as Allaire chatted with him. Then Lundqvist left the ice, 62 minutes after he had arrived. As he undressed at his locker, a horde of news media members huddled around him. Lundqvist is the Rangers\u2019 star, and Wednesday\u2019s game rests more on him than on anyone else. He was asked if he was ever nervous before games like this.", "answer": "his entire N.H.L. career", "sentence": "Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career .", "paragraph_sentence": "During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire, the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots. Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career . If anyone could notice anything wrong with Lundqvist, his positioning or his technique, it would be Allaire. Near the end of practice, Lundqvist crouched and began stretching again as Allaire chatted with him. Then Lundqvist left the ice, 62 minutes after he had arrived. As he undressed at his locker, a horde of news media members huddled around him. Lundqvist is the Rangers\u2019 star, and Wednesday\u2019s game rests more on him than on anyone else. He was asked if he was ever nervous before games like this.", "paragraph_answer": "During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire, the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots. Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career . If anyone could notice anything wrong with Lundqvist, his positioning or his technique, it would be Allaire. Near the end of practice, Lundqvist crouched and began stretching again as Allaire chatted with him. Then Lundqvist left the ice, 62 minutes after he had arrived. As he undressed at his locker, a horde of news media members huddled around him. Lundqvist is the Rangers\u2019 star, and Wednesday\u2019s game rests more on him than on anyone else. He was asked if he was ever nervous before games like this.", "sentence_answer": "Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career ."} +{"question": "How long was Lundqvist been on the ice for practice?", "paragraph": "During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire, the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots. Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career. If anyone could notice anything wrong with Lundqvist, his positioning or his technique, it would be Allaire. Near the end of practice, Lundqvist crouched and began stretching again as Allaire chatted with him. Then Lundqvist left the ice, 62 minutes after he had arrived. As he undressed at his locker, a horde of news media members huddled around him. Lundqvist is the Rangers\u2019 star, and Wednesday\u2019s game rests more on him than on anyone else. He was asked if he was ever nervous before games like this.", "answer": "his entire N.H.L. career", "sentence": "Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career .", "paragraph_sentence": "During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire, the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots. Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career . If anyone could notice anything wrong with Lundqvist, his positioning or his technique, it would be Allaire. Near the end of practice, Lundqvist crouched and began stretching again as Allaire chatted with him. Then Lundqvist left the ice, 62 minutes after he had arrived. As he undressed at his locker, a horde of news media members huddled around him. Lundqvist is the Rangers\u2019 star, and Wednesday\u2019s game rests more on him than on anyone else. He was asked if he was ever nervous before games like this.", "paragraph_answer": "During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire, the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots. Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career . If anyone could notice anything wrong with Lundqvist, his positioning or his technique, it would be Allaire. Near the end of practice, Lundqvist crouched and began stretching again as Allaire chatted with him. Then Lundqvist left the ice, 62 minutes after he had arrived. As he undressed at his locker, a horde of news media members huddled around him. Lundqvist is the Rangers\u2019 star, and Wednesday\u2019s game rests more on him than on anyone else. He was asked if he was ever nervous before games like this.", "sentence_answer": "Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career ."} +{"question": "What day is the game on?", "paragraph": "During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire, the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots. Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career. If anyone could notice anything wrong with Lundqvist, his positioning or his technique, it would be Allaire. Near the end of practice, Lundqvist crouched and began stretching again as Allaire chatted with him. Then Lundqvist left the ice, 62 minutes after he had arrived. As he undressed at his locker, a horde of news media members huddled around him. Lundqvist is the Rangers\u2019 star, and Wednesday\u2019s game rests more on him than on anyone else. He was asked if he was ever nervous before games like this.", "answer": "Wednesday", "sentence": "Lundqvist is the Rangers\u2019 star, and Wednesday \u2019s game rests more on him than on anyone else.", "paragraph_sentence": "During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire, the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots. Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career. If anyone could notice anything wrong with Lundqvist, his positioning or his technique, it would be Allaire. Near the end of practice, Lundqvist crouched and began stretching again as Allaire chatted with him. Then Lundqvist left the ice, 62 minutes after he had arrived. As he undressed at his locker, a horde of news media members huddled around him. Lundqvist is the Rangers\u2019 star, and Wednesday \u2019s game rests more on him than on anyone else. He was asked if he was ever nervous before games like this.", "paragraph_answer": "During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire, the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots. Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career. If anyone could notice anything wrong with Lundqvist, his positioning or his technique, it would be Allaire. Near the end of practice, Lundqvist crouched and began stretching again as Allaire chatted with him. Then Lundqvist left the ice, 62 minutes after he had arrived. As he undressed at his locker, a horde of news media members huddled around him. Lundqvist is the Rangers\u2019 star, and Wednesday \u2019s game rests more on him than on anyone else. He was asked if he was ever nervous before games like this.", "sentence_answer": "Lundqvist is the Rangers\u2019 star, and Wednesday \u2019s game rests more on him than on anyone else."} +{"question": "What did a report ask Lundqvist about pregame", "paragraph": "During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire, the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots. Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career. If anyone could notice anything wrong with Lundqvist, his positioning or his technique, it would be Allaire. Near the end of practice, Lundqvist crouched and began stretching again as Allaire chatted with him. Then Lundqvist left the ice, 62 minutes after he had arrived. As he undressed at his locker, a horde of news media members huddled around him. Lundqvist is the Rangers\u2019 star, and Wednesday\u2019s game rests more on him than on anyone else. He was asked if he was ever nervous before games like this.", "answer": "if he was ever nervous", "sentence": "He was asked if he was ever nervous before games like this.", "paragraph_sentence": "During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire, the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots. Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career. If anyone could notice anything wrong with Lundqvist, his positioning or his technique, it would be Allaire. Near the end of practice, Lundqvist crouched and began stretching again as Allaire chatted with him. Then Lundqvist left the ice, 62 minutes after he had arrived. As he undressed at his locker, a horde of news media members huddled around him. Lundqvist is the Rangers\u2019 star, and Wednesday\u2019s game rests more on him than on anyone else. He was asked if he was ever nervous before games like this. ", "paragraph_answer": "During the final few drills, Benoit Allaire, the Rangers\u2019 goalie coach, watched carefully as Lundqvist was pelted with more shots. Allaire has been Lundqvist\u2019s coach for his entire N.H.L. career. If anyone could notice anything wrong with Lundqvist, his positioning or his technique, it would be Allaire. Near the end of practice, Lundqvist crouched and began stretching again as Allaire chatted with him. Then Lundqvist left the ice, 62 minutes after he had arrived. As he undressed at his locker, a horde of news media members huddled around him. Lundqvist is the Rangers\u2019 star, and Wednesday\u2019s game rests more on him than on anyone else. He was asked if he was ever nervous before games like this.", "sentence_answer": "He was asked if he was ever nervous before games like this."} +{"question": "How did Lundqvist look during their scrimmage?", "paragraph": "When practice started, Lundqvist took his place in the same goal he always does, and Talbot took his place at the opposite end. The Rangers began to scrimmage, but much of the action seemed to gravitate toward Talbot\u2019s end. Lundqvist knelt down, waiting. He started stretching again. He looked bored. But the purpose of this practice was mostly to get the players moving around, their blood flowing on their day off, and Lundqvist would probably be better served saving his energy. The series against the Capitals has been grueling.", "answer": "bored.", "sentence": "He looked bored. But the purpose of this practice was mostly to get the players moving around, their blood flowing on their day off, and Lundqvist would probably be better served saving his energy.", "paragraph_sentence": "When practice started, Lundqvist took his place in the same goal he always does, and Talbot took his place at the opposite end. The Rangers began to scrimmage, but much of the action seemed to gravitate toward Talbot\u2019s end. Lundqvist knelt down, waiting. He started stretching again. He looked bored. But the purpose of this practice was mostly to get the players moving around, their blood flowing on their day off, and Lundqvist would probably be better served saving his energy. The series against the Capitals has been grueling.", "paragraph_answer": "When practice started, Lundqvist took his place in the same goal he always does, and Talbot took his place at the opposite end. The Rangers began to scrimmage, but much of the action seemed to gravitate toward Talbot\u2019s end. Lundqvist knelt down, waiting. He started stretching again. He looked bored. But the purpose of this practice was mostly to get the players moving around, their blood flowing on their day off, and Lundqvist would probably be better served saving his energy. The series against the Capitals has been grueling.", "sentence_answer": "He looked bored. But the purpose of this practice was mostly to get the players moving around, their blood flowing on their day off, and Lundqvist would probably be better served saving his energy."} +{"question": "Who was in the opposite goal of Lundqvist during practice?", "paragraph": "When practice started, Lundqvist took his place in the same goal he always does, and Talbot took his place at the opposite end. The Rangers began to scrimmage, but much of the action seemed to gravitate toward Talbot\u2019s end. Lundqvist knelt down, waiting. He started stretching again. He looked bored. But the purpose of this practice was mostly to get the players moving around, their blood flowing on their day off, and Lundqvist would probably be better served saving his energy. The series against the Capitals has been grueling.", "answer": "Talbot", "sentence": "When practice started, Lundqvist took his place in the same goal he always does, and Talbot took his place at the opposite end.", "paragraph_sentence": " When practice started, Lundqvist took his place in the same goal he always does, and Talbot took his place at the opposite end. The Rangers began to scrimmage, but much of the action seemed to gravitate toward Talbot\u2019s end. Lundqvist knelt down, waiting. He started stretching again. He looked bored. But the purpose of this practice was mostly to get the players moving around, their blood flowing on their day off, and Lundqvist would probably be better served saving his energy. The series against the Capitals has been grueling.", "paragraph_answer": "When practice started, Lundqvist took his place in the same goal he always does, and Talbot took his place at the opposite end. The Rangers began to scrimmage, but much of the action seemed to gravitate toward Talbot\u2019s end. Lundqvist knelt down, waiting. He started stretching again. He looked bored. But the purpose of this practice was mostly to get the players moving around, their blood flowing on their day off, and Lundqvist would probably be better served saving his energy. The series against the Capitals has been grueling.", "sentence_answer": "When practice started, Lundqvist took his place in the same goal he always does, and Talbot took his place at the opposite end."} +{"question": "what was the purpose of practice?", "paragraph": "When practice started, Lundqvist took his place in the same goal he always does, and Talbot took his place at the opposite end. The Rangers began to scrimmage, but much of the action seemed to gravitate toward Talbot\u2019s end. Lundqvist knelt down, waiting. He started stretching again. He looked bored. But the purpose of this practice was mostly to get the players moving around, their blood flowing on their day off, and Lundqvist would probably be better served saving his energy. The series against the Capitals has been grueling.", "answer": "to get the players moving around, their blood flowing", "sentence": "But the purpose of this practice was mostly to get the players moving around, their blood flowing on their day off, and Lundqvist would probably be better served saving his energy.", "paragraph_sentence": "When practice started, Lundqvist took his place in the same goal he always does, and Talbot took his place at the opposite end. The Rangers began to scrimmage, but much of the action seemed to gravitate toward Talbot\u2019s end. Lundqvist knelt down, waiting. He started stretching again. He looked bored. But the purpose of this practice was mostly to get the players moving around, their blood flowing on their day off, and Lundqvist would probably be better served saving his energy. The series against the Capitals has been grueling.", "paragraph_answer": "When practice started, Lundqvist took his place in the same goal he always does, and Talbot took his place at the opposite end. The Rangers began to scrimmage, but much of the action seemed to gravitate toward Talbot\u2019s end. Lundqvist knelt down, waiting. He started stretching again. He looked bored. But the purpose of this practice was mostly to get the players moving around, their blood flowing on their day off, and Lundqvist would probably be better served saving his energy. The series against the Capitals has been grueling.", "sentence_answer": "But the purpose of this practice was mostly to get the players moving around, their blood flowing on their day off, and Lundqvist would probably be better served saving his energy."} +{"question": "How was the series against the Capital described?", "paragraph": "When practice started, Lundqvist took his place in the same goal he always does, and Talbot took his place at the opposite end. The Rangers began to scrimmage, but much of the action seemed to gravitate toward Talbot\u2019s end. Lundqvist knelt down, waiting. He started stretching again. He looked bored. But the purpose of this practice was mostly to get the players moving around, their blood flowing on their day off, and Lundqvist would probably be better served saving his energy. The series against the Capitals has been grueling.", "answer": "grueling.", "sentence": "The series against the Capitals has been grueling.", "paragraph_sentence": "When practice started, Lundqvist took his place in the same goal he always does, and Talbot took his place at the opposite end. The Rangers began to scrimmage, but much of the action seemed to gravitate toward Talbot\u2019s end. Lundqvist knelt down, waiting. He started stretching again. He looked bored. But the purpose of this practice was mostly to get the players moving around, their blood flowing on their day off, and Lundqvist would probably be better served saving his energy. The series against the Capitals has been grueling. ", "paragraph_answer": "When practice started, Lundqvist took his place in the same goal he always does, and Talbot took his place at the opposite end. The Rangers began to scrimmage, but much of the action seemed to gravitate toward Talbot\u2019s end. Lundqvist knelt down, waiting. He started stretching again. He looked bored. But the purpose of this practice was mostly to get the players moving around, their blood flowing on their day off, and Lundqvist would probably be better served saving his energy. The series against the Capitals has been grueling. ", "sentence_answer": "The series against the Capitals has been grueling. "} +{"question": "Who was Lundqvist's backup?", "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": "Cam Talbot", "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "Who where they playing in the series mentioned in the article?", "paragraph": "He went to the corner, along with Cam Talbot, his backup, and the two of them started shuffling, sliding in place, reacting to invisible pucks. Then he and Talbot took turns in net as a staff member fired shots from close range and different angles. Practice had not officially started, but Lundqvist was working up a sweat. This is the way he starts most every practice, though. The Rangers were preparing to play Game 7 of their second-round playoff series against the Washington Capitals, set for Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden, and Lundqvist was acting as if it were any other game. \u201cMy preparation has stayed the same for years,\u201d Lundqvist said afterward. \u201cI don\u2019t change anything when the games get more important. I like consistency. I try to stick with the same approach.\u201d It is hard to argue with him. Lundqvist has won 13 of his last 16 games in which the Rangers have faced elimination, posting a 1.42 goals-against average, a .955 save percentage and two shutouts. He is undefeated in his last nine elimination games at the Garden and owns a 5-1 career record in Game 7s.", "answer": "Washington Capitals", "sentence": "The Rangers were preparing to play Game 7 of their second-round playoff series against the Washington Capitals , set for Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden, and Lundqvist was acting as if it were any other game.", "paragraph_sentence": "He went to the corner, along with Cam Talbot, his backup, and the two of them started shuffling, sliding in place, reacting to invisible pucks. Then he and Talbot took turns in net as a staff member fired shots from close range and different angles. Practice had not officially started, but Lundqvist was working up a sweat. This is the way he starts most every practice, though. The Rangers were preparing to play Game 7 of their second-round playoff series against the Washington Capitals , set for Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden, and Lundqvist was acting as if it were any other game. \u201cMy preparation has stayed the same for years,\u201d Lundqvist said afterward. \u201cI don\u2019t change anything when the games get more important. I like consistency. I try to stick with the same approach.\u201d It is hard to argue with him. Lundqvist has won 13 of his last 16 games in which the Rangers have faced elimination, posting a 1.42 goals-against average, a .955 save percentage and two shutouts. He is undefeated in his last nine elimination games at the Garden and owns a 5-1 career record in Game 7s.", "paragraph_answer": "He went to the corner, along with Cam Talbot, his backup, and the two of them started shuffling, sliding in place, reacting to invisible pucks. Then he and Talbot took turns in net as a staff member fired shots from close range and different angles. Practice had not officially started, but Lundqvist was working up a sweat. This is the way he starts most every practice, though. The Rangers were preparing to play Game 7 of their second-round playoff series against the Washington Capitals , set for Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden, and Lundqvist was acting as if it were any other game. \u201cMy preparation has stayed the same for years,\u201d Lundqvist said afterward. \u201cI don\u2019t change anything when the games get more important. I like consistency. I try to stick with the same approach.\u201d It is hard to argue with him. Lundqvist has won 13 of his last 16 games in which the Rangers have faced elimination, posting a 1.42 goals-against average, a .955 save percentage and two shutouts. He is undefeated in his last nine elimination games at the Garden and owns a 5-1 career record in Game 7s.", "sentence_answer": "The Rangers were preparing to play Game 7 of their second-round playoff series against the Washington Capitals , set for Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden, and Lundqvist was acting as if it were any other game."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What is Lundqvist record in the last 16 elimnation games?", "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": "13 of his last 16", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "What is Lundqvist's record in the Garden for game 7's", "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": "5-1", "sentence": "a 5-1 career record in Game 7s.", "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": "a 5-1 career record in Game 7s."} +{"question": "In what state was the only law that was affected located?", "paragraph": "Monday\u2019s development, which set no precedent, did not affect the validity of any law aside from North Carolina\u2019s. The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal. \u201cThe state requires physicians to recite the state\u2019s message even when the patient physically avoids seeing or hearing it,\u201d their brief said. \u201cThat is farce, not informed consent, and it demonstrates beyond any doubt that the requirement is an impermissible attempt to use physicians to spread the state\u2019s ideological message.\u201d Abortion rights groups welcomed the Supreme Court\u2019s action. \u201cThis misguided law would have inserted politics and bad medicine into every exam room in North Carolina,\u201d Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement.", "answer": "North Carolina", "sentence": "Monday\u2019s development, which set no precedent, did not affect the validity of any law aside from North Carolina \u2019s. The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal.", "paragraph_sentence": " Monday\u2019s development, which set no precedent, did not affect the validity of any law aside from North Carolina \u2019s. The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal. \u201cThe state requires physicians to recite the state\u2019s message even when the patient physically avoids seeing or hearing it,\u201d their brief said. \u201cThat is farce, not informed consent, and it demonstrates beyond any doubt that the requirement is an impermissible attempt to use physicians to spread the state\u2019s ideological message.\u201d Abortion rights groups welcomed the Supreme Court\u2019s action. \u201cThis misguided law would have inserted politics and bad medicine into every exam room in North Carolina,\u201d Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement.", "paragraph_answer": "Monday\u2019s development, which set no precedent, did not affect the validity of any law aside from North Carolina \u2019s. The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal. \u201cThe state requires physicians to recite the state\u2019s message even when the patient physically avoids seeing or hearing it,\u201d their brief said. \u201cThat is farce, not informed consent, and it demonstrates beyond any doubt that the requirement is an impermissible attempt to use physicians to spread the state\u2019s ideological message.\u201d Abortion rights groups welcomed the Supreme Court\u2019s action. \u201cThis misguided law would have inserted politics and bad medicine into every exam room in North Carolina,\u201d Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement.", "sentence_answer": "Monday\u2019s development, which set no precedent, did not affect the validity of any law aside from North Carolina \u2019s. The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal."} +{"question": "What group wanted the state court to overturn the law?", "paragraph": "Monday\u2019s development, which set no precedent, did not affect the validity of any law aside from North Carolina\u2019s. The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal. \u201cThe state requires physicians to recite the state\u2019s message even when the patient physically avoids seeing or hearing it,\u201d their brief said. \u201cThat is farce, not informed consent, and it demonstrates beyond any doubt that the requirement is an impermissible attempt to use physicians to spread the state\u2019s ideological message.\u201d Abortion rights groups welcomed the Supreme Court\u2019s action. \u201cThis misguided law would have inserted politics and bad medicine into every exam room in North Carolina,\u201d Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement.", "answer": "health care providers", "sentence": "The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal.", "paragraph_sentence": "Monday\u2019s development, which set no precedent, did not affect the validity of any law aside from North Carolina\u2019s. The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal. \u201cThe state requires physicians to recite the state\u2019s message even when the patient physically avoids seeing or hearing it,\u201d their brief said. \u201cThat is farce, not informed consent, and it demonstrates beyond any doubt that the requirement is an impermissible attempt to use physicians to spread the state\u2019s ideological message.\u201d Abortion rights groups welcomed the Supreme Court\u2019s action. \u201cThis misguided law would have inserted politics and bad medicine into every exam room in North Carolina,\u201d Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement.", "paragraph_answer": "Monday\u2019s development, which set no precedent, did not affect the validity of any law aside from North Carolina\u2019s. The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal. \u201cThe state requires physicians to recite the state\u2019s message even when the patient physically avoids seeing or hearing it,\u201d their brief said. \u201cThat is farce, not informed consent, and it demonstrates beyond any doubt that the requirement is an impermissible attempt to use physicians to spread the state\u2019s ideological message.\u201d Abortion rights groups welcomed the Supreme Court\u2019s action. \u201cThis misguided law would have inserted politics and bad medicine into every exam room in North Carolina,\u201d Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement.", "sentence_answer": "The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal."} +{"question": "Which group was pleased with the court decision?", "paragraph": "Monday\u2019s development, which set no precedent, did not affect the validity of any law aside from North Carolina\u2019s. The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal. \u201cThe state requires physicians to recite the state\u2019s message even when the patient physically avoids seeing or hearing it,\u201d their brief said. \u201cThat is farce, not informed consent, and it demonstrates beyond any doubt that the requirement is an impermissible attempt to use physicians to spread the state\u2019s ideological message.\u201d Abortion rights groups welcomed the Supreme Court\u2019s action. \u201cThis misguided law would have inserted politics and bad medicine into every exam room in North Carolina,\u201d Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement.", "answer": "Abortion rights groups", "sentence": "\u201cThat is farce, not informed consent, and it demonstrates beyond any doubt that the requirement is an impermissible attempt to use physicians to spread the state\u2019s ideological message.\u201d Abortion rights groups welcomed the Supreme Court\u2019s action.", "paragraph_sentence": "Monday\u2019s development, which set no precedent, did not affect the validity of any law aside from North Carolina\u2019s. The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal. \u201cThe state requires physicians to recite the state\u2019s message even when the patient physically avoids seeing or hearing it,\u201d their brief said. \u201cThat is farce, not informed consent, and it demonstrates beyond any doubt that the requirement is an impermissible attempt to use physicians to spread the state\u2019s ideological message.\u201d Abortion rights groups welcomed the Supreme Court\u2019s action. \u201cThis misguided law would have inserted politics and bad medicine into every exam room in North Carolina,\u201d Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement.", "paragraph_answer": "Monday\u2019s development, which set no precedent, did not affect the validity of any law aside from North Carolina\u2019s. The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal. \u201cThe state requires physicians to recite the state\u2019s message even when the patient physically avoids seeing or hearing it,\u201d their brief said. \u201cThat is farce, not informed consent, and it demonstrates beyond any doubt that the requirement is an impermissible attempt to use physicians to spread the state\u2019s ideological message.\u201d Abortion rights groups welcomed the Supreme Court\u2019s action. \u201cThis misguided law would have inserted politics and bad medicine into every exam room in North Carolina,\u201d Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThat is farce, not informed consent, and it demonstrates beyond any doubt that the requirement is an impermissible attempt to use physicians to spread the state\u2019s ideological message.\u201d Abortion rights groups welcomed the Supreme Court\u2019s action."} +{"question": "What is the name of the president of Planned Parenthood?", "paragraph": "Monday\u2019s development, which set no precedent, did not affect the validity of any law aside from North Carolina\u2019s. The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal. \u201cThe state requires physicians to recite the state\u2019s message even when the patient physically avoids seeing or hearing it,\u201d their brief said. \u201cThat is farce, not informed consent, and it demonstrates beyond any doubt that the requirement is an impermissible attempt to use physicians to spread the state\u2019s ideological message.\u201d Abortion rights groups welcomed the Supreme Court\u2019s action. \u201cThis misguided law would have inserted politics and bad medicine into every exam room in North Carolina,\u201d Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement.", "answer": "Cecile Richards", "sentence": "\u201cThis misguided law would have inserted politics and bad medicine into every exam room in North Carolina,\u201d Cecile Richards , president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement.", "paragraph_sentence": "Monday\u2019s development, which set no precedent, did not affect the validity of any law aside from North Carolina\u2019s. The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal. \u201cThe state requires physicians to recite the state\u2019s message even when the patient physically avoids seeing or hearing it,\u201d their brief said. \u201cThat is farce, not informed consent, and it demonstrates beyond any doubt that the requirement is an impermissible attempt to use physicians to spread the state\u2019s ideological message.\u201d Abortion rights groups welcomed the Supreme Court\u2019s action. \u201cThis misguided law would have inserted politics and bad medicine into every exam room in North Carolina,\u201d Cecile Richards , president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement. ", "paragraph_answer": "Monday\u2019s development, which set no precedent, did not affect the validity of any law aside from North Carolina\u2019s. The health care providers who challenged the North Carolina law urged the justices to turn down the state\u2019s appeal. \u201cThe state requires physicians to recite the state\u2019s message even when the patient physically avoids seeing or hearing it,\u201d their brief said. \u201cThat is farce, not informed consent, and it demonstrates beyond any doubt that the requirement is an impermissible attempt to use physicians to spread the state\u2019s ideological message.\u201d Abortion rights groups welcomed the Supreme Court\u2019s action. \u201cThis misguided law would have inserted politics and bad medicine into every exam room in North Carolina,\u201d Cecile Richards , president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThis misguided law would have inserted politics and bad medicine into every exam room in North Carolina,\u201d Cecile Richards , president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement."} +{"question": "How many police officers did it took to gain forced entry into Mr. Yu's apartment?", "paragraph": "The lawyer, Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan. She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates. Mr. Yu\u2019s detention comes amid a concerted assault in China on so-called rights defense lawyers, a small but audacious band of legal defenders who have been willing to take on politically sensitive cases.", "answer": "a dozen", "sentence": "The lawyer, Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan.", "paragraph_sentence": " The lawyer, Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan. She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates. Mr. Yu\u2019s detention comes amid a concerted assault in China on so-called rights defense lawyers, a small but audacious band of legal defenders who have been willing to take on politically sensitive cases.", "paragraph_answer": "The lawyer, Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan. She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates. Mr. Yu\u2019s detention comes amid a concerted assault in China on so-called rights defense lawyers, a small but audacious band of legal defenders who have been willing to take on politically sensitive cases.", "sentence_answer": "The lawyer, Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan."} +{"question": "What did the police confiscate from Mr. Yu's apartment?", "paragraph": "The lawyer, Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan. She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates. Mr. Yu\u2019s detention comes amid a concerted assault in China on so-called rights defense lawyers, a small but audacious band of legal defenders who have been willing to take on politically sensitive cases.", "answer": "a computer and memory stick", "sentence": "She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates.", "paragraph_sentence": "The lawyer, Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan. She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates. Mr. Yu\u2019s detention comes amid a concerted assault in China on so-called rights defense lawyers, a small but audacious band of legal defenders who have been willing to take on politically sensitive cases.", "paragraph_answer": "The lawyer, Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan. She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates. Mr. Yu\u2019s detention comes amid a concerted assault in China on so-called rights defense lawyers, a small but audacious band of legal defenders who have been willing to take on politically sensitive cases.", "sentence_answer": "She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates."} +{"question": "What occupation does Mr. Yu have?", "paragraph": "The lawyer, Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan. She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates. Mr. Yu\u2019s detention comes amid a concerted assault in China on so-called rights defense lawyers, a small but audacious band of legal defenders who have been willing to take on politically sensitive cases.", "answer": "lawyer", "sentence": "The lawyer , Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan.", "paragraph_sentence": " The lawyer , Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan. She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates. Mr. Yu\u2019s detention comes amid a concerted assault in China on so-called rights defense lawyers, a small but audacious band of legal defenders who have been willing to take on politically sensitive cases.", "paragraph_answer": "The lawyer , Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan. She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates. Mr. Yu\u2019s detention comes amid a concerted assault in China on so-called rights defense lawyers, a small but audacious band of legal defenders who have been willing to take on politically sensitive cases.", "sentence_answer": "The lawyer , Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan."} +{"question": "What charges did Mr. Yu face?", "paragraph": "The lawyer, Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan. She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates. Mr. Yu\u2019s detention comes amid a concerted assault in China on so-called rights defense lawyers, a small but audacious band of legal defenders who have been willing to take on politically sensitive cases.", "answer": "\u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d", "sentence": "She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates.", "paragraph_sentence": "The lawyer, Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan. She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates. Mr. Yu\u2019s detention comes amid a concerted assault in China on so-called rights defense lawyers, a small but audacious band of legal defenders who have been willing to take on politically sensitive cases.", "paragraph_answer": "The lawyer, Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan. She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates. Mr. Yu\u2019s detention comes amid a concerted assault in China on so-called rights defense lawyers, a small but audacious band of legal defenders who have been willing to take on politically sensitive cases.", "sentence_answer": "She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates."} +{"question": "What type of lawyer is Mr. Yu?", "paragraph": "The lawyer, Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan. She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates. Mr. Yu\u2019s detention comes amid a concerted assault in China on so-called rights defense lawyers, a small but audacious band of legal defenders who have been willing to take on politically sensitive cases.", "answer": "rights defense lawyers", "sentence": "Mr. Yu\u2019s detention comes amid a concerted assault in China on so-called rights defense lawyers , a small but audacious band of legal defenders who have been willing to take on politically sensitive cases.", "paragraph_sentence": "The lawyer, Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan. She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates. Mr. Yu\u2019s detention comes amid a concerted assault in China on so-called rights defense lawyers , a small but audacious band of legal defenders who have been willing to take on politically sensitive cases. ", "paragraph_answer": "The lawyer, Yu Wensheng, 48, was taken away in handcuffs late Thursday night after more than a dozen police officers forced their way into the family\u2019s Beijing apartment, said his wife, Xu Yan. She said in an interview that the police had confiscated a computer and memory stick from the apartment and had said Mr. Yu would face criminal charges of \u201cpicking quarrels and provoking trouble,\u201d a nebulous, catchall accusation increasingly lodged against Chinese rights advocates. Mr. Yu\u2019s detention comes amid a concerted assault in China on so-called rights defense lawyers , a small but audacious band of legal defenders who have been willing to take on politically sensitive cases.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Yu\u2019s detention comes amid a concerted assault in China on so-called rights defense lawyers , a small but audacious band of legal defenders who have been willing to take on politically sensitive cases."} +{"question": "What did the police warn him not to do?", "paragraph": "In an interview last month, he described weeks of abuse, including sleep deprivation and being tied to a metal chair for hours during questioning. At the time, he said, his interrogators wanted him to confess to having encouraged the pro-democracy demonstrations that shook Hong Kong last year. Mr. Yu said he refused to concede to their demands, and he was later released without charge. He said the police warned him, however, against speaking about his time in custody.", "answer": "speaking about his time in custody", "sentence": "He said the police warned him, however, against speaking about his time in custody .", "paragraph_sentence": "In an interview last month, he described weeks of abuse, including sleep deprivation and being tied to a metal chair for hours during questioning. At the time, he said, his interrogators wanted him to confess to having encouraged the pro-democracy demonstrations that shook Hong Kong last year. Mr. Yu said he refused to concede to their demands, and he was later released without charge. He said the police warned him, however, against speaking about his time in custody . ", "paragraph_answer": "In an interview last month, he described weeks of abuse, including sleep deprivation and being tied to a metal chair for hours during questioning. At the time, he said, his interrogators wanted him to confess to having encouraged the pro-democracy demonstrations that shook Hong Kong last year. Mr. Yu said he refused to concede to their demands, and he was later released without charge. He said the police warned him, however, against speaking about his time in custody .", "sentence_answer": "He said the police warned him, however, against speaking about his time in custody ."} +{"question": "What did the police want him to confess to?", "paragraph": "In an interview last month, he described weeks of abuse, including sleep deprivation and being tied to a metal chair for hours during questioning. At the time, he said, his interrogators wanted him to confess to having encouraged the pro-democracy demonstrations that shook Hong Kong last year. Mr. Yu said he refused to concede to their demands, and he was later released without charge. He said the police warned him, however, against speaking about his time in custody.", "answer": "having encouraged the pro-democracy demonstrations", "sentence": "At the time, he said, his interrogators wanted him to confess to having encouraged the pro-democracy demonstrations that shook Hong Kong last year.", "paragraph_sentence": "In an interview last month, he described weeks of abuse, including sleep deprivation and being tied to a metal chair for hours during questioning. At the time, he said, his interrogators wanted him to confess to having encouraged the pro-democracy demonstrations that shook Hong Kong last year. Mr. Yu said he refused to concede to their demands, and he was later released without charge. He said the police warned him, however, against speaking about his time in custody.", "paragraph_answer": "In an interview last month, he described weeks of abuse, including sleep deprivation and being tied to a metal chair for hours during questioning. At the time, he said, his interrogators wanted him to confess to having encouraged the pro-democracy demonstrations that shook Hong Kong last year. Mr. Yu said he refused to concede to their demands, and he was later released without charge. He said the police warned him, however, against speaking about his time in custody.", "sentence_answer": "At the time, he said, his interrogators wanted him to confess to having encouraged the pro-democracy demonstrations that shook Hong Kong last year."} +{"question": "When did the interview with Mr. Yu take place?", "paragraph": "In an interview last month, he described weeks of abuse, including sleep deprivation and being tied to a metal chair for hours during questioning. At the time, he said, his interrogators wanted him to confess to having encouraged the pro-democracy demonstrations that shook Hong Kong last year. Mr. Yu said he refused to concede to their demands, and he was later released without charge. He said the police warned him, however, against speaking about his time in custody.", "answer": "last month", "sentence": "In an interview last month , he described weeks of abuse, including sleep deprivation and being tied to a metal chair for hours during questioning.", "paragraph_sentence": " In an interview last month , he described weeks of abuse, including sleep deprivation and being tied to a metal chair for hours during questioning. At the time, he said, his interrogators wanted him to confess to having encouraged the pro-democracy demonstrations that shook Hong Kong last year. Mr. Yu said he refused to concede to their demands, and he was later released without charge. He said the police warned him, however, against speaking about his time in custody.", "paragraph_answer": "In an interview last month , he described weeks of abuse, including sleep deprivation and being tied to a metal chair for hours during questioning. At the time, he said, his interrogators wanted him to confess to having encouraged the pro-democracy demonstrations that shook Hong Kong last year. Mr. Yu said he refused to concede to their demands, and he was later released without charge. He said the police warned him, however, against speaking about his time in custody.", "sentence_answer": "In an interview last month , he described weeks of abuse, including sleep deprivation and being tied to a metal chair for hours during questioning."} +{"question": "What kinds of abuse did Mr. Yu claim he suffered?", "paragraph": "In an interview last month, he described weeks of abuse, including sleep deprivation and being tied to a metal chair for hours during questioning. At the time, he said, his interrogators wanted him to confess to having encouraged the pro-democracy demonstrations that shook Hong Kong last year. Mr. Yu said he refused to concede to their demands, and he was later released without charge. He said the police warned him, however, against speaking about his time in custody.", "answer": "sleep deprivation and being tied to a metal chair for hours", "sentence": "In an interview last month, he described weeks of abuse, including sleep deprivation and being tied to a metal chair for hours during questioning.", "paragraph_sentence": " In an interview last month, he described weeks of abuse, including sleep deprivation and being tied to a metal chair for hours during questioning. At the time, he said, his interrogators wanted him to confess to having encouraged the pro-democracy demonstrations that shook Hong Kong last year. Mr. Yu said he refused to concede to their demands, and he was later released without charge. He said the police warned him, however, against speaking about his time in custody.", "paragraph_answer": "In an interview last month, he described weeks of abuse, including sleep deprivation and being tied to a metal chair for hours during questioning. At the time, he said, his interrogators wanted him to confess to having encouraged the pro-democracy demonstrations that shook Hong Kong last year. Mr. Yu said he refused to concede to their demands, and he was later released without charge. He said the police warned him, however, against speaking about his time in custody.", "sentence_answer": "In an interview last month, he described weeks of abuse, including sleep deprivation and being tied to a metal chair for hours during questioning."} +{"question": "Did Mr. Yu confess to the police's demands?", "paragraph": "In an interview last month, he described weeks of abuse, including sleep deprivation and being tied to a metal chair for hours during questioning. At the time, he said, his interrogators wanted him to confess to having encouraged the pro-democracy demonstrations that shook Hong Kong last year. Mr. Yu said he refused to concede to their demands, and he was later released without charge. He said the police warned him, however, against speaking about his time in custody.", "answer": "he refused to concede to their demands", "sentence": "Mr. Yu said he refused to concede to their demands , and he was later released without charge.", "paragraph_sentence": "In an interview last month, he described weeks of abuse, including sleep deprivation and being tied to a metal chair for hours during questioning. At the time, he said, his interrogators wanted him to confess to having encouraged the pro-democracy demonstrations that shook Hong Kong last year. Mr. Yu said he refused to concede to their demands , and he was later released without charge. He said the police warned him, however, against speaking about his time in custody.", "paragraph_answer": "In an interview last month, he described weeks of abuse, including sleep deprivation and being tied to a metal chair for hours during questioning. At the time, he said, his interrogators wanted him to confess to having encouraged the pro-democracy demonstrations that shook Hong Kong last year. Mr. Yu said he refused to concede to their demands , and he was later released without charge. He said the police warned him, however, against speaking about his time in custody.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Yu said he refused to concede to their demands , and he was later released without charge."} +{"question": "Who did Mr. Yu accuse of detaining lawyers?", "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": "Ministry of Public Security", "sentence": "Last week, he posted online a letter he sent to Chinese leaders that accused the Ministry of Public Security of illegally detaining lawyers.", "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": "Last week, he posted online a letter he sent to Chinese leaders that accused the Ministry of Public Security of illegally detaining lawyers."} +{"question": "Who was the petition aimed at?", "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": "Mr. Xi", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "Who is an acquaintance of Mr. Yu that also signed the petition?", "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": "Cheng Hai", "sentence": "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.", "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": " 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."} +{"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."} +{"question": "Who did Mr. Hai accuse of seeking to punish him?", "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": "police", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "Which other lawyers were also detained?", "paragraph": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu, the brother of Li Heping, a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep. \u201cThis is another blow to the Chinese government\u2019s pledge that it will uphold the rule of law,\u201d a spokesman for the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, a Hong Kong organization, said by telephone. Ms. Yan, Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday. An officer who picked up the phone at the police station refused to confirm whether Mr. Yu was there.", "answer": "Li Chunfu", "sentence": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu , the brother of Li Heping, a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep.", "paragraph_sentence": " In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu , the brother of Li Heping, a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep. \u201cThis is another blow to the Chinese government\u2019s pledge that it will uphold the rule of law,\u201d a spokesman for the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, a Hong Kong organization, said by telephone. Ms. Yan, Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday. An officer who picked up the phone at the police station refused to confirm whether Mr. Yu was there.", "paragraph_answer": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu , the brother of Li Heping, a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep. \u201cThis is another blow to the Chinese government\u2019s pledge that it will uphold the rule of law,\u201d a spokesman for the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, a Hong Kong organization, said by telephone. Ms. Yan, Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday. An officer who picked up the phone at the police station refused to confirm whether Mr. Yu was there.", "sentence_answer": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu , the brother of Li Heping, a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep."} +{"question": "Who disappeared in an earlier police sweep of lawyers?", "paragraph": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu, the brother of Li Heping, a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep. \u201cThis is another blow to the Chinese government\u2019s pledge that it will uphold the rule of law,\u201d a spokesman for the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, a Hong Kong organization, said by telephone. Ms. Yan, Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday. An officer who picked up the phone at the police station refused to confirm whether Mr. Yu was there.", "answer": "Li Heping", "sentence": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu, the brother of Li Heping , a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep.", "paragraph_sentence": " In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu, the brother of Li Heping , a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep. \u201cThis is another blow to the Chinese government\u2019s pledge that it will uphold the rule of law,\u201d a spokesman for the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, a Hong Kong organization, said by telephone. Ms. Yan, Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday. An officer who picked up the phone at the police station refused to confirm whether Mr. Yu was there.", "paragraph_answer": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu, the brother of Li Heping , a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep. \u201cThis is another blow to the Chinese government\u2019s pledge that it will uphold the rule of law,\u201d a spokesman for the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, a Hong Kong organization, said by telephone. Ms. Yan, Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday. An officer who picked up the phone at the police station refused to confirm whether Mr. Yu was there.", "sentence_answer": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu, the brother of Li Heping , a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep."} +{"question": "Who was Li Chunfu's brother?", "paragraph": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu, the brother of Li Heping, a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep. \u201cThis is another blow to the Chinese government\u2019s pledge that it will uphold the rule of law,\u201d a spokesman for the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, a Hong Kong organization, said by telephone. Ms. Yan, Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday. An officer who picked up the phone at the police station refused to confirm whether Mr. Yu was there.", "answer": "Li Heping, a prominent rights defender", "sentence": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu, the brother of Li Heping, a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep.", "paragraph_sentence": " In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu, the brother of Li Heping, a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep. \u201cThis is another blow to the Chinese government\u2019s pledge that it will uphold the rule of law,\u201d a spokesman for the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, a Hong Kong organization, said by telephone. Ms. Yan, Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday. An officer who picked up the phone at the police station refused to confirm whether Mr. Yu was there.", "paragraph_answer": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu, the brother of Li Heping, a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep. \u201cThis is another blow to the Chinese government\u2019s pledge that it will uphold the rule of law,\u201d a spokesman for the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, a Hong Kong organization, said by telephone. Ms. Yan, Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday. An officer who picked up the phone at the police station refused to confirm whether Mr. Yu was there.", "sentence_answer": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu, the brother of Li Heping, a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep."} +{"question": "Which group accused the Chinese government of breaking their pledge to uphold rule of law?", "paragraph": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu, the brother of Li Heping, a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep. \u201cThis is another blow to the Chinese government\u2019s pledge that it will uphold the rule of law,\u201d a spokesman for the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, a Hong Kong organization, said by telephone. Ms. Yan, Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday. An officer who picked up the phone at the police station refused to confirm whether Mr. Yu was there.", "answer": "China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group", "sentence": "\u201cThis is another blow to the Chinese government\u2019s pledge that it will uphold the rule of law,\u201d a spokesman for the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group , a Hong Kong organization, said by telephone.", "paragraph_sentence": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu, the brother of Li Heping, a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep. \u201cThis is another blow to the Chinese government\u2019s pledge that it will uphold the rule of law,\u201d a spokesman for the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group , a Hong Kong organization, said by telephone. Ms. Yan, Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday. An officer who picked up the phone at the police station refused to confirm whether Mr. Yu was there.", "paragraph_answer": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu, the brother of Li Heping, a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep. \u201cThis is another blow to the Chinese government\u2019s pledge that it will uphold the rule of law,\u201d a spokesman for the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group , a Hong Kong organization, said by telephone. Ms. Yan, Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday. An officer who picked up the phone at the police station refused to confirm whether Mr. Yu was there.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThis is another blow to the Chinese government\u2019s pledge that it will uphold the rule of law,\u201d a spokesman for the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group , a Hong Kong organization, said by telephone."} +{"question": "Who went to the police station to try to see Mr. Yu but was refused?", "paragraph": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu, the brother of Li Heping, a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep. \u201cThis is another blow to the Chinese government\u2019s pledge that it will uphold the rule of law,\u201d a spokesman for the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, a Hong Kong organization, said by telephone. Ms. Yan, Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday. An officer who picked up the phone at the police station refused to confirm whether Mr. Yu was there.", "answer": "Ms. Yan", "sentence": "Ms. Yan , Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday.", "paragraph_sentence": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu, the brother of Li Heping, a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep. \u201cThis is another blow to the Chinese government\u2019s pledge that it will uphold the rule of law,\u201d a spokesman for the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, a Hong Kong organization, said by telephone. Ms. Yan , Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday. An officer who picked up the phone at the police station refused to confirm whether Mr. Yu was there.", "paragraph_answer": "In recent days, the police have detained a number of other lawyers, including Li Chunfu, the brother of Li Heping, a prominent rights defender who is among those who disappeared in an earlier police sweep. \u201cThis is another blow to the Chinese government\u2019s pledge that it will uphold the rule of law,\u201d a spokesman for the China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, a Hong Kong organization, said by telephone. Ms. Yan , Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday. An officer who picked up the phone at the police station refused to confirm whether Mr. Yu was there.", "sentence_answer": " Ms. Yan , Mr. Yu\u2019s wife, said officers at the police station where her husband was being held refused to allow her to see him on Friday."} +{"question": "Who was a long time speaker of the NY state Assembly", "paragraph": "ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges.", "answer": "Sheldon Silver", "sentence": "ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver , the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges.", "paragraph_sentence": " ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver , the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges. ", "paragraph_answer": "ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver , the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges.", "sentence_answer": "ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver , the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges."} +{"question": "What did Silver do on sunday?", "paragraph": "ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges.", "answer": "relinquish his duties", "sentence": "ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges.", "paragraph_sentence": " ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges. ", "paragraph_answer": "ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges.", "sentence_answer": "ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges."} +{"question": "Were is duties relinqished temporary or perminantely", "paragraph": "ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges.", "answer": "temporary basis", "sentence": "ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges.", "paragraph_sentence": " ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges. ", "paragraph_answer": "ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges.", "sentence_answer": "ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges."} +{"question": "Why did Silver relinquish his duties?", "paragraph": "ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges.", "answer": "fights federal corruption charges", "sentence": "ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges .", "paragraph_sentence": " ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges . ", "paragraph_answer": "ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges .", "sentence_answer": "ALBANY \u2014 Sheldon Silver, the longtime speaker of the New York State Assembly, agreed on Sunday to relinquish his duties on a temporary basis as he fights federal corruption charges ."} +{"question": "What did Silver delgate duties to?", "paragraph": "In an unusual arrangement, Mr. Silver would not quit his post. Instead, he would temporarily delegate his duties as speaker to a group of senior Assembly members. Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus. Immediately after Mr. Silver\u2019s arrest on Thursday, Democrats in the Assembly rallied behind him. Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated.", "answer": "speaker to a group of senior Assembly members", "sentence": "Instead, he would temporarily delegate his duties as speaker to a group of senior Assembly members .", "paragraph_sentence": "In an unusual arrangement, Mr. Silver would not quit his post. Instead, he would temporarily delegate his duties as speaker to a group of senior Assembly members . Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus. Immediately after Mr. Silver\u2019s arrest on Thursday, Democrats in the Assembly rallied behind him. Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated.", "paragraph_answer": "In an unusual arrangement, Mr. Silver would not quit his post. Instead, he would temporarily delegate his duties as speaker to a group of senior Assembly members . Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus. Immediately after Mr. Silver\u2019s arrest on Thursday, Democrats in the Assembly rallied behind him. Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated.", "sentence_answer": "Instead, he would temporarily delegate his duties as speaker to a group of senior Assembly members ."} +{"question": "What day was the closed door meeting", "paragraph": "In an unusual arrangement, Mr. Silver would not quit his post. Instead, he would temporarily delegate his duties as speaker to a group of senior Assembly members. Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus. Immediately after Mr. Silver\u2019s arrest on Thursday, Democrats in the Assembly rallied behind him. Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated.", "answer": "Monday", "sentence": "Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus.", "paragraph_sentence": "In an unusual arrangement, Mr. Silver would not quit his post. Instead, he would temporarily delegate his duties as speaker to a group of senior Assembly members. Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus. Immediately after Mr. Silver\u2019s arrest on Thursday, Democrats in the Assembly rallied behind him. Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated.", "paragraph_answer": "In an unusual arrangement, Mr. Silver would not quit his post. Instead, he would temporarily delegate his duties as speaker to a group of senior Assembly members. Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus. Immediately after Mr. Silver\u2019s arrest on Thursday, Democrats in the Assembly rallied behind him. Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated.", "sentence_answer": "Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus."} +{"question": "What caucus was having a closed door meting.", "paragraph": "In an unusual arrangement, Mr. Silver would not quit his post. Instead, he would temporarily delegate his duties as speaker to a group of senior Assembly members. Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus. Immediately after Mr. Silver\u2019s arrest on Thursday, Democrats in the Assembly rallied behind him. Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated.", "answer": "Democratic", "sentence": "Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus.", "paragraph_sentence": "In an unusual arrangement, Mr. Silver would not quit his post. Instead, he would temporarily delegate his duties as speaker to a group of senior Assembly members. Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus. Immediately after Mr. Silver\u2019s arrest on Thursday, Democrats in the Assembly rallied behind him. Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated.", "paragraph_answer": "In an unusual arrangement, Mr. Silver would not quit his post. Instead, he would temporarily delegate his duties as speaker to a group of senior Assembly members. Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus. Immediately after Mr. Silver\u2019s arrest on Thursday, Democrats in the Assembly rallied behind him. Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated.", "sentence_answer": "Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus."} +{"question": "What happened to Silver on Thursday", "paragraph": "In an unusual arrangement, Mr. Silver would not quit his post. Instead, he would temporarily delegate his duties as speaker to a group of senior Assembly members. Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus. Immediately after Mr. Silver\u2019s arrest on Thursday, Democrats in the Assembly rallied behind him. Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated.", "answer": "arrest", "sentence": "Immediately after Mr. Silver\u2019s arrest on Thursday, Democrats in the Assembly rallied behind him.", "paragraph_sentence": "In an unusual arrangement, Mr. Silver would not quit his post. Instead, he would temporarily delegate his duties as speaker to a group of senior Assembly members. Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus. Immediately after Mr. Silver\u2019s arrest on Thursday, Democrats in the Assembly rallied behind him. Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated.", "paragraph_answer": "In an unusual arrangement, Mr. Silver would not quit his post. Instead, he would temporarily delegate his duties as speaker to a group of senior Assembly members. Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus. Immediately after Mr. Silver\u2019s arrest on Thursday, Democrats in the Assembly rallied behind him. Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated.", "sentence_answer": "Immediately after Mr. Silver\u2019s arrest on Thursday, Democrats in the Assembly rallied behind him."} +{"question": "what did silver predict for himself in court?", "paragraph": "In an unusual arrangement, Mr. Silver would not quit his post. Instead, he would temporarily delegate his duties as speaker to a group of senior Assembly members. Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus. Immediately after Mr. Silver\u2019s arrest on Thursday, Democrats in the Assembly rallied behind him. Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated.", "answer": "he would be vindicated.", "sentence": "Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated.", "paragraph_sentence": "In an unusual arrangement, Mr. Silver would not quit his post. Instead, he would temporarily delegate his duties as speaker to a group of senior Assembly members. Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus. Immediately after Mr. Silver\u2019s arrest on Thursday, Democrats in the Assembly rallied behind him. Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated. ", "paragraph_answer": "In an unusual arrangement, Mr. Silver would not quit his post. Instead, he would temporarily delegate his duties as speaker to a group of senior Assembly members. Under the plan, which the Assembly\u2019s Democratic caucus is to consider in a closed-door meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Silver would \u201cnot specifically step down, but step back,\u201d according to a person briefed on the situation, who insisted on anonymity because the plan had not yet been presented to the caucus. Immediately after Mr. Silver\u2019s arrest on Thursday, Democrats in the Assembly rallied behind him. Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated. ", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Silver, who has proved adept over the years at withstanding ethical and legal scrutiny, predicted he would be vindicated. "} +{"question": "What would cause a distraction during the case?", "paragraph": "\u201cHe is resolved to fight the case, but realized doing the budget while doing the case would be a distraction,\u201d said a person involved in the discussions this weekend who was not authorized to speak on the record because of the sensitive nature of the talks. Under the tentative plan developed on Sunday, the Assembly majority leader, Joseph D. Morelle of the Rochester area, and the chairman of the powerful Ways and Means Committee, Herman D. Farrell Jr., Democrat of Manhattan, would assume responsibility for budget negotiations.", "answer": "doing the budget", "sentence": "\u201cHe is resolved to fight the case, but realized doing the budget while doing the case would be a distraction,\u201d said a person involved in the discussions this weekend who was not authorized to speak on the record because of the sensitive nature of the talks.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cHe is resolved to fight the case, but realized doing the budget while doing the case would be a distraction,\u201d said a person involved in the discussions this weekend who was not authorized to speak on the record because of the sensitive nature of the talks. Under the tentative plan developed on Sunday, the Assembly majority leader, Joseph D. Morelle of the Rochester area, and the chairman of the powerful Ways and Means Committee, Herman D. Farrell Jr., Democrat of Manhattan, would assume responsibility for budget negotiations.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cHe is resolved to fight the case, but realized doing the budget while doing the case would be a distraction,\u201d said a person involved in the discussions this weekend who was not authorized to speak on the record because of the sensitive nature of the talks. Under the tentative plan developed on Sunday, the Assembly majority leader, Joseph D. Morelle of the Rochester area, and the chairman of the powerful Ways and Means Committee, Herman D. Farrell Jr., Democrat of Manhattan, would assume responsibility for budget negotiations.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cHe is resolved to fight the case, but realized doing the budget while doing the case would be a distraction,\u201d said a person involved in the discussions this weekend who was not authorized to speak on the record because of the sensitive nature of the talks."} +{"question": "The chairman of Ways and Means and who took responsiblity for budget negotiations?", "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": "Joseph D. Morelle", "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."} +{"question": "What day was there a tentitive plan set up?", "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": "Sunday", "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."} +{"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."} +{"question": "Who was chairman for Ways and Means Committee", "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": "Herman D. Farrell Jr.", "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."} +{"question": "what will the delgations of Silver's responsiblities do?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe speaker is not stepping down,\u201d Mr. Whyland said. He added that Mr. Silver\u2019s delegation of his responsibilities \u201cwill give him the flexibility he needs so that he can defend himself against these charges, and he is confident that he will be found innocent.\u201d Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs. Federal prosecutors said he disguised his windfall by portraying it as legitimate income he earned working part time, ostensibly as a personal injury lawyer. The charges against Mr. Silver threatened to throw the Capitol into turmoil because of the central role that he plays there. The speaker of the Assembly is one of Albany\u2019s \u201cthree men in a room,\u201d along with the governor and the State Senate majority leader, who make many of the most important decisions in state government. The new leadership arrangement will be a startling change because of Mr. Silver\u2019s longevity: As governors and other legislators have come and gone, Mr. Silver has remained firmly in place as speaker since 1994.", "answer": "defend himself against these charges", "sentence": "He added that Mr. Silver\u2019s delegation of his responsibilities \u201cwill give him the flexibility he needs so that he can defend himself against these charges , and he is confident that he will be found innocent.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe speaker is not stepping down,\u201d Mr. Whyland said. He added that Mr. Silver\u2019s delegation of his responsibilities \u201cwill give him the flexibility he needs so that he can defend himself against these charges , and he is confident that he will be found innocent.\u201d Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs. Federal prosecutors said he disguised his windfall by portraying it as legitimate income he earned working part time, ostensibly as a personal injury lawyer. The charges against Mr. Silver threatened to throw the Capitol into turmoil because of the central role that he plays there. The speaker of the Assembly is one of Albany\u2019s \u201cthree men in a room,\u201d along with the governor and the State Senate majority leader, who make many of the most important decisions in state government. The new leadership arrangement will be a startling change because of Mr. Silver\u2019s longevity: As governors and other legislators have come and gone, Mr. Silver has remained firmly in place as speaker since 1994.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe speaker is not stepping down,\u201d Mr. Whyland said. He added that Mr. Silver\u2019s delegation of his responsibilities \u201cwill give him the flexibility he needs so that he can defend himself against these charges , and he is confident that he will be found innocent.\u201d Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs. Federal prosecutors said he disguised his windfall by portraying it as legitimate income he earned working part time, ostensibly as a personal injury lawyer. The charges against Mr. Silver threatened to throw the Capitol into turmoil because of the central role that he plays there. The speaker of the Assembly is one of Albany\u2019s \u201cthree men in a room,\u201d along with the governor and the State Senate majority leader, who make many of the most important decisions in state government. The new leadership arrangement will be a startling change because of Mr. Silver\u2019s longevity: As governors and other legislators have come and gone, Mr. Silver has remained firmly in place as speaker since 1994.", "sentence_answer": "He added that Mr. Silver\u2019s delegation of his responsibilities \u201cwill give him the flexibility he needs so that he can defend himself against these charges , and he is confident that he will be found innocent.\u201d"} +{"question": "How old is Silver?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe speaker is not stepping down,\u201d Mr. Whyland said. He added that Mr. Silver\u2019s delegation of his responsibilities \u201cwill give him the flexibility he needs so that he can defend himself against these charges, and he is confident that he will be found innocent.\u201d Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs. Federal prosecutors said he disguised his windfall by portraying it as legitimate income he earned working part time, ostensibly as a personal injury lawyer. The charges against Mr. Silver threatened to throw the Capitol into turmoil because of the central role that he plays there. The speaker of the Assembly is one of Albany\u2019s \u201cthree men in a room,\u201d along with the governor and the State Senate majority leader, who make many of the most important decisions in state government. The new leadership arrangement will be a startling change because of Mr. Silver\u2019s longevity: As governors and other legislators have come and gone, Mr. Silver has remained firmly in place as speaker since 1994.", "answer": "70", "sentence": "Mr. Silver, 70 , who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe speaker is not stepping down,\u201d Mr. Whyland said. He added that Mr. Silver\u2019s delegation of his responsibilities \u201cwill give him the flexibility he needs so that he can defend himself against these charges, and he is confident that he will be found innocent.\u201d Mr. Silver, 70 , who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs. Federal prosecutors said he disguised his windfall by portraying it as legitimate income he earned working part time, ostensibly as a personal injury lawyer. The charges against Mr. Silver threatened to throw the Capitol into turmoil because of the central role that he plays there. The speaker of the Assembly is one of Albany\u2019s \u201cthree men in a room,\u201d along with the governor and the State Senate majority leader, who make many of the most important decisions in state government. The new leadership arrangement will be a startling change because of Mr. Silver\u2019s longevity: As governors and other legislators have come and gone, Mr. Silver has remained firmly in place as speaker since 1994.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe speaker is not stepping down,\u201d Mr. Whyland said. He added that Mr. Silver\u2019s delegation of his responsibilities \u201cwill give him the flexibility he needs so that he can defend himself against these charges, and he is confident that he will be found innocent.\u201d Mr. Silver, 70 , who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs. Federal prosecutors said he disguised his windfall by portraying it as legitimate income he earned working part time, ostensibly as a personal injury lawyer. The charges against Mr. Silver threatened to throw the Capitol into turmoil because of the central role that he plays there. The speaker of the Assembly is one of Albany\u2019s \u201cthree men in a room,\u201d along with the governor and the State Senate majority leader, who make many of the most important decisions in state government. The new leadership arrangement will be a startling change because of Mr. Silver\u2019s longevity: As governors and other legislators have come and gone, Mr. Silver has remained firmly in place as speaker since 1994.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Silver, 70 , who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs."} +{"question": "Where is Liver from?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe speaker is not stepping down,\u201d Mr. Whyland said. He added that Mr. Silver\u2019s delegation of his responsibilities \u201cwill give him the flexibility he needs so that he can defend himself against these charges, and he is confident that he will be found innocent.\u201d Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs. Federal prosecutors said he disguised his windfall by portraying it as legitimate income he earned working part time, ostensibly as a personal injury lawyer. The charges against Mr. Silver threatened to throw the Capitol into turmoil because of the central role that he plays there. The speaker of the Assembly is one of Albany\u2019s \u201cthree men in a room,\u201d along with the governor and the State Senate majority leader, who make many of the most important decisions in state government. The new leadership arrangement will be a startling change because of Mr. Silver\u2019s longevity: As governors and other legislators have come and gone, Mr. Silver has remained firmly in place as speaker since 1994.", "answer": "Lower East Side of Manhattan", "sentence": "Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan , is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe speaker is not stepping down,\u201d Mr. Whyland said. He added that Mr. Silver\u2019s delegation of his responsibilities \u201cwill give him the flexibility he needs so that he can defend himself against these charges, and he is confident that he will be found innocent.\u201d Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan , is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs. Federal prosecutors said he disguised his windfall by portraying it as legitimate income he earned working part time, ostensibly as a personal injury lawyer. The charges against Mr. Silver threatened to throw the Capitol into turmoil because of the central role that he plays there. The speaker of the Assembly is one of Albany\u2019s \u201cthree men in a room,\u201d along with the governor and the State Senate majority leader, who make many of the most important decisions in state government. The new leadership arrangement will be a startling change because of Mr. Silver\u2019s longevity: As governors and other legislators have come and gone, Mr. Silver has remained firmly in place as speaker since 1994.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe speaker is not stepping down,\u201d Mr. Whyland said. He added that Mr. Silver\u2019s delegation of his responsibilities \u201cwill give him the flexibility he needs so that he can defend himself against these charges, and he is confident that he will be found innocent.\u201d Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan , is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs. Federal prosecutors said he disguised his windfall by portraying it as legitimate income he earned working part time, ostensibly as a personal injury lawyer. The charges against Mr. Silver threatened to throw the Capitol into turmoil because of the central role that he plays there. The speaker of the Assembly is one of Albany\u2019s \u201cthree men in a room,\u201d along with the governor and the State Senate majority leader, who make many of the most important decisions in state government. The new leadership arrangement will be a startling change because of Mr. Silver\u2019s longevity: As governors and other legislators have come and gone, Mr. Silver has remained firmly in place as speaker since 1994.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan , is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs."} +{"question": "What is silver accused of?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe speaker is not stepping down,\u201d Mr. Whyland said. He added that Mr. Silver\u2019s delegation of his responsibilities \u201cwill give him the flexibility he needs so that he can defend himself against these charges, and he is confident that he will be found innocent.\u201d Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs. Federal prosecutors said he disguised his windfall by portraying it as legitimate income he earned working part time, ostensibly as a personal injury lawyer. The charges against Mr. Silver threatened to throw the Capitol into turmoil because of the central role that he plays there. The speaker of the Assembly is one of Albany\u2019s \u201cthree men in a room,\u201d along with the governor and the State Senate majority leader, who make many of the most important decisions in state government. The new leadership arrangement will be a startling change because of Mr. Silver\u2019s longevity: As governors and other legislators have come and gone, Mr. Silver has remained firmly in place as speaker since 1994.", "answer": "abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs", "sentence": "Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe speaker is not stepping down,\u201d Mr. Whyland said. He added that Mr. Silver\u2019s delegation of his responsibilities \u201cwill give him the flexibility he needs so that he can defend himself against these charges, and he is confident that he will be found innocent.\u201d Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs . Federal prosecutors said he disguised his windfall by portraying it as legitimate income he earned working part time, ostensibly as a personal injury lawyer. The charges against Mr. Silver threatened to throw the Capitol into turmoil because of the central role that he plays there. The speaker of the Assembly is one of Albany\u2019s \u201cthree men in a room,\u201d along with the governor and the State Senate majority leader, who make many of the most important decisions in state government. The new leadership arrangement will be a startling change because of Mr. Silver\u2019s longevity: As governors and other legislators have come and gone, Mr. Silver has remained firmly in place as speaker since 1994.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe speaker is not stepping down,\u201d Mr. Whyland said. He added that Mr. Silver\u2019s delegation of his responsibilities \u201cwill give him the flexibility he needs so that he can defend himself against these charges, and he is confident that he will be found innocent.\u201d Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs . Federal prosecutors said he disguised his windfall by portraying it as legitimate income he earned working part time, ostensibly as a personal injury lawyer. The charges against Mr. Silver threatened to throw the Capitol into turmoil because of the central role that he plays there. The speaker of the Assembly is one of Albany\u2019s \u201cthree men in a room,\u201d along with the governor and the State Senate majority leader, who make many of the most important decisions in state government. The new leadership arrangement will be a startling change because of Mr. Silver\u2019s longevity: As governors and other legislators have come and gone, Mr. Silver has remained firmly in place as speaker since 1994.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs ."} +{"question": "What year did Silver become speaker?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe speaker is not stepping down,\u201d Mr. Whyland said. He added that Mr. Silver\u2019s delegation of his responsibilities \u201cwill give him the flexibility he needs so that he can defend himself against these charges, and he is confident that he will be found innocent.\u201d Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs. Federal prosecutors said he disguised his windfall by portraying it as legitimate income he earned working part time, ostensibly as a personal injury lawyer. The charges against Mr. Silver threatened to throw the Capitol into turmoil because of the central role that he plays there. The speaker of the Assembly is one of Albany\u2019s \u201cthree men in a room,\u201d along with the governor and the State Senate majority leader, who make many of the most important decisions in state government. The new leadership arrangement will be a startling change because of Mr. Silver\u2019s longevity: As governors and other legislators have come and gone, Mr. Silver has remained firmly in place as speaker since 1994.", "answer": "1994.", "sentence": "The new leadership arrangement will be a startling change because of Mr. Silver\u2019s longevity: As governors and other legislators have come and gone, Mr. Silver has remained firmly in place as speaker since 1994.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe speaker is not stepping down,\u201d Mr. Whyland said. He added that Mr. Silver\u2019s delegation of his responsibilities \u201cwill give him the flexibility he needs so that he can defend himself against these charges, and he is confident that he will be found innocent.\u201d Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs. Federal prosecutors said he disguised his windfall by portraying it as legitimate income he earned working part time, ostensibly as a personal injury lawyer. The charges against Mr. Silver threatened to throw the Capitol into turmoil because of the central role that he plays there. The speaker of the Assembly is one of Albany\u2019s \u201cthree men in a room,\u201d along with the governor and the State Senate majority leader, who make many of the most important decisions in state government. The new leadership arrangement will be a startling change because of Mr. Silver\u2019s longevity: As governors and other legislators have come and gone, Mr. Silver has remained firmly in place as speaker since 1994. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe speaker is not stepping down,\u201d Mr. Whyland said. He added that Mr. Silver\u2019s delegation of his responsibilities \u201cwill give him the flexibility he needs so that he can defend himself against these charges, and he is confident that he will be found innocent.\u201d Mr. Silver, 70, who is from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in payoffs. Federal prosecutors said he disguised his windfall by portraying it as legitimate income he earned working part time, ostensibly as a personal injury lawyer. The charges against Mr. Silver threatened to throw the Capitol into turmoil because of the central role that he plays there. The speaker of the Assembly is one of Albany\u2019s \u201cthree men in a room,\u201d along with the governor and the State Senate majority leader, who make many of the most important decisions in state government. The new leadership arrangement will be a startling change because of Mr. Silver\u2019s longevity: As governors and other legislators have come and gone, Mr. Silver has remained firmly in place as speaker since 1994. ", "sentence_answer": "The new leadership arrangement will be a startling change because of Mr. Silver\u2019s longevity: As governors and other legislators have come and gone, Mr. Silver has remained firmly in place as speaker since 1994. "} +{"question": "What did people worry about if silver was found guilty?", "paragraph": "The Monday session had been the subject of great anticipation over the weekend, as Assembly members discussed with one another how the situation might unfold, and considered who could succeed Mr. Silver. Some worried that the charges against him could taint all Assembly Democrats, hurting members when they seek re-election. Some long-serving members, on the other hand, were concerned that Mr. Silver was being unfairly condemned before standing trial, and were wary about seeking his ouster before he had a chance to defend himself in court.", "answer": "taint all Assembly Democrats", "sentence": "Some worried that the charges against him could taint all Assembly Democrats , hurting members when they seek re-election.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Monday session had been the subject of great anticipation over the weekend, as Assembly members discussed with one another how the situation might unfold, and considered who could succeed Mr. Silver. Some worried that the charges against him could taint all Assembly Democrats , hurting members when they seek re-election. Some long-serving members, on the other hand, were concerned that Mr. Silver was being unfairly condemned before standing trial, and were wary about seeking his ouster before he had a chance to defend himself in court.", "paragraph_answer": "The Monday session had been the subject of great anticipation over the weekend, as Assembly members discussed with one another how the situation might unfold, and considered who could succeed Mr. Silver. Some worried that the charges against him could taint all Assembly Democrats , hurting members when they seek re-election. Some long-serving members, on the other hand, were concerned that Mr. Silver was being unfairly condemned before standing trial, and were wary about seeking his ouster before he had a chance to defend himself in court.", "sentence_answer": "Some worried that the charges against him could taint all Assembly Democrats , hurting members when they seek re-election."} +{"question": "What day were people waiting in great anticipation for", "paragraph": "The Monday session had been the subject of great anticipation over the weekend, as Assembly members discussed with one another how the situation might unfold, and considered who could succeed Mr. Silver. Some worried that the charges against him could taint all Assembly Democrats, hurting members when they seek re-election. Some long-serving members, on the other hand, were concerned that Mr. Silver was being unfairly condemned before standing trial, and were wary about seeking his ouster before he had a chance to defend himself in court.", "answer": "Monday", "sentence": "The Monday session had been the subject of great anticipation over the weekend, as Assembly members discussed with one another how the situation might unfold, and considered who could succeed Mr. Silver.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Monday session had been the subject of great anticipation over the weekend, as Assembly members discussed with one another how the situation might unfold, and considered who could succeed Mr. Silver. Some worried that the charges against him could taint all Assembly Democrats, hurting members when they seek re-election. Some long-serving members, on the other hand, were concerned that Mr. Silver was being unfairly condemned before standing trial, and were wary about seeking his ouster before he had a chance to defend himself in court.", "paragraph_answer": "The Monday session had been the subject of great anticipation over the weekend, as Assembly members discussed with one another how the situation might unfold, and considered who could succeed Mr. Silver. Some worried that the charges against him could taint all Assembly Democrats, hurting members when they seek re-election. Some long-serving members, on the other hand, were concerned that Mr. Silver was being unfairly condemned before standing trial, and were wary about seeking his ouster before he had a chance to defend himself in court.", "sentence_answer": "The Monday session had been the subject of great anticipation over the weekend, as Assembly members discussed with one another how the situation might unfold, and considered who could succeed Mr. Silver."} +{"question": "Who was worried that Silver was being unfairly condemned?", "paragraph": "The Monday session had been the subject of great anticipation over the weekend, as Assembly members discussed with one another how the situation might unfold, and considered who could succeed Mr. Silver. Some worried that the charges against him could taint all Assembly Democrats, hurting members when they seek re-election. Some long-serving members, on the other hand, were concerned that Mr. Silver was being unfairly condemned before standing trial, and were wary about seeking his ouster before he had a chance to defend himself in court.", "answer": "long-serving members,", "sentence": "Some long-serving members, on the other hand, were concerned that Mr. Silver was being unfairly condemned before standing trial, and were wary about seeking his ouster before he had a chance to defend himself in court.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Monday session had been the subject of great anticipation over the weekend, as Assembly members discussed with one another how the situation might unfold, and considered who could succeed Mr. Silver. Some worried that the charges against him could taint all Assembly Democrats, hurting members when they seek re-election. Some long-serving members, on the other hand, were concerned that Mr. Silver was being unfairly condemned before standing trial, and were wary about seeking his ouster before he had a chance to defend himself in court. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Monday session had been the subject of great anticipation over the weekend, as Assembly members discussed with one another how the situation might unfold, and considered who could succeed Mr. Silver. Some worried that the charges against him could taint all Assembly Democrats, hurting members when they seek re-election. Some long-serving members, on the other hand, were concerned that Mr. Silver was being unfairly condemned before standing trial, and were wary about seeking his ouster before he had a chance to defend himself in court.", "sentence_answer": "Some long-serving members, on the other hand, were concerned that Mr. Silver was being unfairly condemned before standing trial, and were wary about seeking his ouster before he had a chance to defend himself in court."} +{"question": "What were long serving memebers wary of?", "paragraph": "The Monday session had been the subject of great anticipation over the weekend, as Assembly members discussed with one another how the situation might unfold, and considered who could succeed Mr. Silver. Some worried that the charges against him could taint all Assembly Democrats, hurting members when they seek re-election. Some long-serving members, on the other hand, were concerned that Mr. Silver was being unfairly condemned before standing trial, and were wary about seeking his ouster before he had a chance to defend himself in court.", "answer": "seeking his ouster", "sentence": "Some long-serving members, on the other hand, were concerned that Mr. Silver was being unfairly condemned before standing trial, and were wary about seeking his ouster before he had a chance to defend himself in court.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Monday session had been the subject of great anticipation over the weekend, as Assembly members discussed with one another how the situation might unfold, and considered who could succeed Mr. Silver. Some worried that the charges against him could taint all Assembly Democrats, hurting members when they seek re-election. Some long-serving members, on the other hand, were concerned that Mr. Silver was being unfairly condemned before standing trial, and were wary about seeking his ouster before he had a chance to defend himself in court. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Monday session had been the subject of great anticipation over the weekend, as Assembly members discussed with one another how the situation might unfold, and considered who could succeed Mr. Silver. Some worried that the charges against him could taint all Assembly Democrats, hurting members when they seek re-election. Some long-serving members, on the other hand, were concerned that Mr. Silver was being unfairly condemned before standing trial, and were wary about seeking his ouster before he had a chance to defend himself in court.", "sentence_answer": "Some long-serving members, on the other hand, were concerned that Mr. Silver was being unfairly condemned before standing trial, and were wary about seeking his ouster before he had a chance to defend himself in court."} +{"question": "Which party had the best political momentum?", "paragraph": "Republicans showing the greatest political momentum in the poll were the three outsiders: Mr. Trump, who drew strong support from self-described moderates, people with family incomes of $50,000 or less, and those without a college degree; Mr. Carson, who edged out Mr. Trump among conservatives and wealthier voters and was much stronger among college graduates; and Carly Fiorina, a former business executive who had support from 4 percent of Republicans, an improvement over her trace amount in August.", "answer": "Republicans", "sentence": "Republicans showing the greatest political momentum in the poll were the three outsiders: Mr. Trump, who drew strong support from self-described moderates, people with family incomes of $50,000 or less, and those without a college degree; Mr. Carson, who edged out Mr. Trump among conservatives and wealthier voters and was much stronger among college graduates; and Carly Fiorina, a former business executive who had support from 4 percent of Republicans, an improvement over her trace amount in August.", "paragraph_sentence": " Republicans showing the greatest political momentum in the poll were the three outsiders: Mr. Trump, who drew strong support from self-described moderates, people with family incomes of $50,000 or less, and those without a college degree; Mr. Carson, who edged out Mr. Trump among conservatives and wealthier voters and was much stronger among college graduates; and Carly Fiorina, a former business executive who had support from 4 percent of Republicans, an improvement over her trace amount in August. ", "paragraph_answer": " Republicans showing the greatest political momentum in the poll were the three outsiders: Mr. Trump, who drew strong support from self-described moderates, people with family incomes of $50,000 or less, and those without a college degree; Mr. Carson, who edged out Mr. Trump among conservatives and wealthier voters and was much stronger among college graduates; and Carly Fiorina, a former business executive who had support from 4 percent of Republicans, an improvement over her trace amount in August.", "sentence_answer": " Republicans showing the greatest political momentum in the poll were the three outsiders: Mr. Trump, who drew strong support from self-described moderates, people with family incomes of $50,000 or less, and those without a college degree; Mr. Carson, who edged out Mr. Trump among conservatives and wealthier voters and was much stronger among college graduates; and Carly Fiorina, a former business executive who had support from 4 percent of Republicans, an improvement over her trace amount in August."} +{"question": "Prior to her candidacy what was Carly Firorina's profession?", "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": "business executive", "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."} +{"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."} +{"question": "Who was stronger with the college students?", "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. Carson", "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."} +{"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."} +{"question": "Who said he was tired of the government?", "paragraph": "\u201cI like Ben Carson because he\u2019s not government, and I\u2019m tired of government,\u201d said Doug May, 70, a retired chief information officer in Bluffton, S.C. Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin. With his mouth, I have no idea what he would say to people.\u201d Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump. Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they would support her enthusiastically, and 35 percent of Republicans said the same of Mr. Trump.", "answer": "Doug May", "sentence": "\u201cI like Ben Carson because he\u2019s not government, and I\u2019m tired of government,\u201d said Doug May , 70, a retired chief information officer in Bluffton, S.C.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI like Ben Carson because he\u2019s not government, and I\u2019m tired of government,\u201d said Doug May , 70, a retired chief information officer in Bluffton, S.C. Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin. With his mouth, I have no idea what he would say to people.\u201d Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump. Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they would support her enthusiastically, and 35 percent of Republicans said the same of Mr. Trump.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI like Ben Carson because he\u2019s not government, and I\u2019m tired of government,\u201d said Doug May , 70, a retired chief information officer in Bluffton, S.C. Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin. With his mouth, I have no idea what he would say to people.\u201d Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump. Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they would support her enthusiastically, and 35 percent of Republicans said the same of Mr. Trump.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI like Ben Carson because he\u2019s not government, and I\u2019m tired of government,\u201d said Doug May , 70, a retired chief information officer in Bluffton, S.C."} +{"question": "Which candidate does May have concerns about when it comes to Putin?", "paragraph": "\u201cI like Ben Carson because he\u2019s not government, and I\u2019m tired of government,\u201d said Doug May, 70, a retired chief information officer in Bluffton, S.C. Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin. With his mouth, I have no idea what he would say to people.\u201d Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump. Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they would support her enthusiastically, and 35 percent of Republicans said the same of Mr. Trump.", "answer": "Donald Trump", "sentence": "Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI like Ben Carson because he\u2019s not government, and I\u2019m tired of government,\u201d said Doug May, 70, a retired chief information officer in Bluffton, S.C. Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin. With his mouth, I have no idea what he would say to people.\u201d Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump. Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they would support her enthusiastically, and 35 percent of Republicans said the same of Mr. Trump.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI like Ben Carson because he\u2019s not government, and I\u2019m tired of government,\u201d said Doug May, 70, a retired chief information officer in Bluffton, S.C. Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin. With his mouth, I have no idea what he would say to people.\u201d Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump. Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they would support her enthusiastically, and 35 percent of Republicans said the same of Mr. Trump.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin."} +{"question": "Which voters are strongly for Hiliary Clinton?", "paragraph": "\u201cI like Ben Carson because he\u2019s not government, and I\u2019m tired of government,\u201d said Doug May, 70, a retired chief information officer in Bluffton, S.C. Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin. With his mouth, I have no idea what he would say to people.\u201d Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump. Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they would support her enthusiastically, and 35 percent of Republicans said the same of Mr. Trump.", "answer": "Democratic", "sentence": "With his mouth, I have no idea what he would say to people.\u201d Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI like Ben Carson because he\u2019s not government, and I\u2019m tired of government,\u201d said Doug May, 70, a retired chief information officer in Bluffton, S.C. Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin. With his mouth, I have no idea what he would say to people.\u201d Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump. Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they would support her enthusiastically, and 35 percent of Republicans said the same of Mr. Trump.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI like Ben Carson because he\u2019s not government, and I\u2019m tired of government,\u201d said Doug May, 70, a retired chief information officer in Bluffton, S.C. Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin. With his mouth, I have no idea what he would say to people.\u201d Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump. Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they would support her enthusiastically, and 35 percent of Republicans said the same of Mr. Trump.", "sentence_answer": "With his mouth, I have no idea what he would say to people.\u201d Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump."} +{"question": "How many democrats would support Clinton?", "paragraph": "\u201cI like Ben Carson because he\u2019s not government, and I\u2019m tired of government,\u201d said Doug May, 70, a retired chief information officer in Bluffton, S.C. Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin. With his mouth, I have no idea what he would say to people.\u201d Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump. Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they would support her enthusiastically, and 35 percent of Republicans said the same of Mr. Trump.", "answer": "Forty-eight percent", "sentence": "Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they would support her enthusiastically, and 35 percent of Republicans said the same of Mr. Trump.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI like Ben Carson because he\u2019s not government, and I\u2019m tired of government,\u201d said Doug May, 70, a retired chief information officer in Bluffton, S.C. Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin. With his mouth, I have no idea what he would say to people.\u201d Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump. Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they would support her enthusiastically, and 35 percent of Republicans said the same of Mr. Trump. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI like Ben Carson because he\u2019s not government, and I\u2019m tired of government,\u201d said Doug May, 70, a retired chief information officer in Bluffton, S.C. Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin. With his mouth, I have no idea what he would say to people.\u201d Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump. Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they would support her enthusiastically, and 35 percent of Republicans said the same of Mr. Trump.", "sentence_answer": " Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they would support her enthusiastically, and 35 percent of Republicans said the same of Mr. Trump."} +{"question": "34% of what voters would support Trump?", "paragraph": "\u201cI like Ben Carson because he\u2019s not government, and I\u2019m tired of government,\u201d said Doug May, 70, a retired chief information officer in Bluffton, S.C. Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin. With his mouth, I have no idea what he would say to people.\u201d Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump. Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they would support her enthusiastically, and 35 percent of Republicans said the same of Mr. Trump.", "answer": "Republicans", "sentence": "Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI like Ben Carson because he\u2019s not government, and I\u2019m tired of government,\u201d said Doug May, 70, a retired chief information officer in Bluffton, S.C. Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin. With his mouth, I have no idea what he would say to people.\u201d Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump. Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they would support her enthusiastically, and 35 percent of Republicans said the same of Mr. Trump.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI like Ben Carson because he\u2019s not government, and I\u2019m tired of government,\u201d said Doug May, 70, a retired chief information officer in Bluffton, S.C. Mr. May added, referring to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin: \u201cWhat worries me the most about Donald Trump is what he would do if put into a situation where he is sitting down with Putin. With his mouth, I have no idea what he would say to people.\u201d Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump. Forty-eight percent of Democrats said they would support her enthusiastically, and 35 percent of Republicans said the same of Mr. Trump.", "sentence_answer": "Democratic voters seem more enthusiastic about Mrs. Clinton as the party\u2019s possible nominee than Republicans do about Mr. Trump."} +{"question": "Who was the curator of the university's Screen Arts Mavericks and Makers collection?", "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": "Philip Hallman", "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.", "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": "\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."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What is the name of the film shot by Welles in the 1970's?", "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": "The Other Side of the Wind", "sentence": "Most prominently, a group of producers are working to complete \u201c The Other Side of the Wind ,\u201d a film shot by Welles in the 1970s.", "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 \u201c The 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 \u201c The 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": "Most prominently, a group of producers are working to complete \u201c The Other Side of the Wind ,\u201d a film shot by Welles in the 1970s."} +{"question": "What date was the Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign launched?", "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": "May 7", "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."} +{"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. "} +{"question": "Who did Ernest Hemingway believe the Nobel prize should have been awarded to?", "paragraph": "Ms. Dow said she was struck by Welles\u2019s account of a wine-soaked session with Ernest Hemingway, who had just won the Nobel Prize for literature. \u201cIt should have gone to Isak Dinesen,\u201d Hemingway said, according to Ms. Dow\u2019s description of Welles\u2019s remembrance. Ms. Dow said it would take perhaps five months to arrange the papers for public use. In early June, Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive. It promises to be an unusual affair, one that Welles may have appreciated. One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments. Ms. Kodar, he added, may have something else up her sleeve. \u201cShe has asked us to tell people she\u2019s planning to do magic tricks with the audience,\u201d Mr. Hallman said.", "answer": "Isak Dinesen", "sentence": "\u201cIt should have gone to Isak Dinesen ,\u201d Hemingway said, according to Ms. Dow\u2019s description of Welles\u2019s remembrance.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Dow said she was struck by Welles\u2019s account of a wine-soaked session with Ernest Hemingway, who had just won the Nobel Prize for literature. \u201cIt should have gone to Isak Dinesen ,\u201d Hemingway said, according to Ms. Dow\u2019s description of Welles\u2019s remembrance. Ms. Dow said it would take perhaps five months to arrange the papers for public use. In early June, Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive. It promises to be an unusual affair, one that Welles may have appreciated. One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments. Ms. Kodar, he added, may have something else up her sleeve. \u201cShe has asked us to tell people she\u2019s planning to do magic tricks with the audience,\u201d Mr. Hallman said.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Dow said she was struck by Welles\u2019s account of a wine-soaked session with Ernest Hemingway, who had just won the Nobel Prize for literature. \u201cIt should have gone to Isak Dinesen ,\u201d Hemingway said, according to Ms. Dow\u2019s description of Welles\u2019s remembrance. Ms. Dow said it would take perhaps five months to arrange the papers for public use. In early June, Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive. It promises to be an unusual affair, one that Welles may have appreciated. One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments. Ms. Kodar, he added, may have something else up her sleeve. \u201cShe has asked us to tell people she\u2019s planning to do magic tricks with the audience,\u201d Mr. Hallman said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt should have gone to Isak Dinesen ,\u201d Hemingway said, according to Ms. Dow\u2019s description of Welles\u2019s remembrance."} +{"question": "When is Ms. Kodar expected to go to a university sponsored Welles symposium?", "paragraph": "Ms. Dow said she was struck by Welles\u2019s account of a wine-soaked session with Ernest Hemingway, who had just won the Nobel Prize for literature. \u201cIt should have gone to Isak Dinesen,\u201d Hemingway said, according to Ms. Dow\u2019s description of Welles\u2019s remembrance. Ms. Dow said it would take perhaps five months to arrange the papers for public use. In early June, Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive. It promises to be an unusual affair, one that Welles may have appreciated. One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments. Ms. Kodar, he added, may have something else up her sleeve. \u201cShe has asked us to tell people she\u2019s planning to do magic tricks with the audience,\u201d Mr. Hallman said.", "answer": "early June", "sentence": "In early June , Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Dow said she was struck by Welles\u2019s account of a wine-soaked session with Ernest Hemingway, who had just won the Nobel Prize for literature. \u201cIt should have gone to Isak Dinesen,\u201d Hemingway said, according to Ms. Dow\u2019s description of Welles\u2019s remembrance. Ms. Dow said it would take perhaps five months to arrange the papers for public use. In early June , Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive. It promises to be an unusual affair, one that Welles may have appreciated. One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments. Ms. Kodar, he added, may have something else up her sleeve. \u201cShe has asked us to tell people she\u2019s planning to do magic tricks with the audience,\u201d Mr. Hallman said.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Dow said she was struck by Welles\u2019s account of a wine-soaked session with Ernest Hemingway, who had just won the Nobel Prize for literature. \u201cIt should have gone to Isak Dinesen,\u201d Hemingway said, according to Ms. Dow\u2019s description of Welles\u2019s remembrance. Ms. Dow said it would take perhaps five months to arrange the papers for public use. In early June , Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive. It promises to be an unusual affair, one that Welles may have appreciated. One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments. Ms. Kodar, he added, may have something else up her sleeve. \u201cShe has asked us to tell people she\u2019s planning to do magic tricks with the audience,\u201d Mr. Hallman said.", "sentence_answer": "In early June , Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive."} +{"question": "What kind of instruments will be played at the Welles symposium?", "paragraph": "Ms. Dow said she was struck by Welles\u2019s account of a wine-soaked session with Ernest Hemingway, who had just won the Nobel Prize for literature. \u201cIt should have gone to Isak Dinesen,\u201d Hemingway said, according to Ms. Dow\u2019s description of Welles\u2019s remembrance. Ms. Dow said it would take perhaps five months to arrange the papers for public use. In early June, Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive. It promises to be an unusual affair, one that Welles may have appreciated. One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments. Ms. Kodar, he added, may have something else up her sleeve. \u201cShe has asked us to tell people she\u2019s planning to do magic tricks with the audience,\u201d Mr. Hallman said.", "answer": "toy instruments", "sentence": "One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments .", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Dow said she was struck by Welles\u2019s account of a wine-soaked session with Ernest Hemingway, who had just won the Nobel Prize for literature. \u201cIt should have gone to Isak Dinesen,\u201d Hemingway said, according to Ms. Dow\u2019s description of Welles\u2019s remembrance. Ms. Dow said it would take perhaps five months to arrange the papers for public use. In early June, Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive. It promises to be an unusual affair, one that Welles may have appreciated. One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments . Ms. Kodar, he added, may have something else up her sleeve. \u201cShe has asked us to tell people she\u2019s planning to do magic tricks with the audience,\u201d Mr. Hallman said.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Dow said she was struck by Welles\u2019s account of a wine-soaked session with Ernest Hemingway, who had just won the Nobel Prize for literature. \u201cIt should have gone to Isak Dinesen,\u201d Hemingway said, according to Ms. Dow\u2019s description of Welles\u2019s remembrance. Ms. Dow said it would take perhaps five months to arrange the papers for public use. In early June, Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive. It promises to be an unusual affair, one that Welles may have appreciated. One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments . Ms. Kodar, he added, may have something else up her sleeve. \u201cShe has asked us to tell people she\u2019s planning to do magic tricks with the audience,\u201d Mr. Hallman said.", "sentence_answer": "One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments ."} +{"question": "Who is planning to perform magic illusions for the attendants of the Welles symposium?", "paragraph": "Ms. Dow said she was struck by Welles\u2019s account of a wine-soaked session with Ernest Hemingway, who had just won the Nobel Prize for literature. \u201cIt should have gone to Isak Dinesen,\u201d Hemingway said, according to Ms. Dow\u2019s description of Welles\u2019s remembrance. Ms. Dow said it would take perhaps five months to arrange the papers for public use. In early June, Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive. It promises to be an unusual affair, one that Welles may have appreciated. One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments. Ms. Kodar, he added, may have something else up her sleeve. \u201cShe has asked us to tell people she\u2019s planning to do magic tricks with the audience,\u201d Mr. Hallman said.", "answer": "Ms. Kodar", "sentence": "In early June, Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Dow said she was struck by Welles\u2019s account of a wine-soaked session with Ernest Hemingway, who had just won the Nobel Prize for literature. \u201cIt should have gone to Isak Dinesen,\u201d Hemingway said, according to Ms. Dow\u2019s description of Welles\u2019s remembrance. Ms. Dow said it would take perhaps five months to arrange the papers for public use. In early June, Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive. It promises to be an unusual affair, one that Welles may have appreciated. One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments. Ms. Kodar, he added, may have something else up her sleeve. \u201cShe has asked us to tell people she\u2019s planning to do magic tricks with the audience,\u201d Mr. Hallman said.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Dow said she was struck by Welles\u2019s account of a wine-soaked session with Ernest Hemingway, who had just won the Nobel Prize for literature. \u201cIt should have gone to Isak Dinesen,\u201d Hemingway said, according to Ms. Dow\u2019s description of Welles\u2019s remembrance. Ms. Dow said it would take perhaps five months to arrange the papers for public use. In early June, Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive. It promises to be an unusual affair, one that Welles may have appreciated. One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments. Ms. Kodar, he added, may have something else up her sleeve. \u201cShe has asked us to tell people she\u2019s planning to do magic tricks with the audience,\u201d Mr. Hallman said.", "sentence_answer": "In early June, Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive."} +{"question": "Who was impressed by the meeting between Ernest Hemingway and Welles?", "paragraph": "Ms. Dow said she was struck by Welles\u2019s account of a wine-soaked session with Ernest Hemingway, who had just won the Nobel Prize for literature. \u201cIt should have gone to Isak Dinesen,\u201d Hemingway said, according to Ms. Dow\u2019s description of Welles\u2019s remembrance. Ms. Dow said it would take perhaps five months to arrange the papers for public use. In early June, Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive. It promises to be an unusual affair, one that Welles may have appreciated. One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments. Ms. Kodar, he added, may have something else up her sleeve. \u201cShe has asked us to tell people she\u2019s planning to do magic tricks with the audience,\u201d Mr. Hallman said.", "answer": "Ms. Dow", "sentence": "Ms. Dow said she was struck by Welles\u2019s account of a wine-soaked session with Ernest Hemingway, who had just won the Nobel Prize for literature.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Dow said she was struck by Welles\u2019s account of a wine-soaked session with Ernest Hemingway, who had just won the Nobel Prize for literature. \u201cIt should have gone to Isak Dinesen,\u201d Hemingway said, according to Ms. Dow\u2019s description of Welles\u2019s remembrance. Ms. Dow said it would take perhaps five months to arrange the papers for public use. In early June, Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive. It promises to be an unusual affair, one that Welles may have appreciated. One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments. Ms. Kodar, he added, may have something else up her sleeve. \u201cShe has asked us to tell people she\u2019s planning to do magic tricks with the audience,\u201d Mr. Hallman said.", "paragraph_answer": " Ms. Dow said she was struck by Welles\u2019s account of a wine-soaked session with Ernest Hemingway, who had just won the Nobel Prize for literature. \u201cIt should have gone to Isak Dinesen,\u201d Hemingway said, according to Ms. Dow\u2019s description of Welles\u2019s remembrance. Ms. Dow said it would take perhaps five months to arrange the papers for public use. In early June, Ms. Kodar is expected to attend a university-sponsored Welles symposium that will honor donors to the film archive. It promises to be an unusual affair, one that Welles may have appreciated. One presentation, Mr. Hallman said, will feature music composed for an ensemble that plays toy instruments. Ms. Kodar, he added, may have something else up her sleeve. \u201cShe has asked us to tell people she\u2019s planning to do magic tricks with the audience,\u201d Mr. Hallman said.", "sentence_answer": " Ms. Dow said she was struck by Welles\u2019s account of a wine-soaked session with Ernest Hemingway, who had just won the Nobel Prize for literature."} +{"question": "What is wrong with the political opposition in Caracas?", "paragraph": "CARACAS, Venezuela \u2014 Now comes the hard part. The political opposition here rode discontent over a failing economy to an overwhelming majority in legislative elections on Sunday, but after years of sniping from the sidelines, members have to get down to the difficult task of delivering on promises to fix the country\u2019s many ills. The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition, won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5, according to electoral authorities. The government\u2019s United Socialist Party will now have 55 seats.", "answer": "members have to get down to the difficult task of delivering on promises to fix the country\u2019s many ills", "sentence": "The political opposition here rode discontent over a failing economy to an overwhelming majority in legislative elections on Sunday, but after years of sniping from the sidelines, members have to get down to the difficult task of delivering on promises to fix the country\u2019s many ills .", "paragraph_sentence": "CARACAS, Venezuela \u2014 Now comes the hard part. The political opposition here rode discontent over a failing economy to an overwhelming majority in legislative elections on Sunday, but after years of sniping from the sidelines, members have to get down to the difficult task of delivering on promises to fix the country\u2019s many ills . The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition, won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5, according to electoral authorities. The government\u2019s United Socialist Party will now have 55 seats.", "paragraph_answer": "CARACAS, Venezuela \u2014 Now comes the hard part. The political opposition here rode discontent over a failing economy to an overwhelming majority in legislative elections on Sunday, but after years of sniping from the sidelines, members have to get down to the difficult task of delivering on promises to fix the country\u2019s many ills . The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition, won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5, according to electoral authorities. The government\u2019s United Socialist Party will now have 55 seats.", "sentence_answer": "The political opposition here rode discontent over a failing economy to an overwhelming majority in legislative elections on Sunday, but after years of sniping from the sidelines, members have to get down to the difficult task of delivering on promises to fix the country\u2019s many ills ."} +{"question": "What day of the week the elections in Venezuela Happened?", "paragraph": "CARACAS, Venezuela \u2014 Now comes the hard part. The political opposition here rode discontent over a failing economy to an overwhelming majority in legislative elections on Sunday, but after years of sniping from the sidelines, members have to get down to the difficult task of delivering on promises to fix the country\u2019s many ills. The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition, won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5, according to electoral authorities. The government\u2019s United Socialist Party will now have 55 seats.", "answer": "Sunday", "sentence": "The political opposition here rode discontent over a failing economy to an overwhelming majority in legislative elections on Sunday , but after years of sniping from the sidelines, members have to get down to the difficult task of delivering on promises to fix the country\u2019s many ills.", "paragraph_sentence": "CARACAS, Venezuela \u2014 Now comes the hard part. The political opposition here rode discontent over a failing economy to an overwhelming majority in legislative elections on Sunday , but after years of sniping from the sidelines, members have to get down to the difficult task of delivering on promises to fix the country\u2019s many ills. The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition, won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5, according to electoral authorities. The government\u2019s United Socialist Party will now have 55 seats.", "paragraph_answer": "CARACAS, Venezuela \u2014 Now comes the hard part. The political opposition here rode discontent over a failing economy to an overwhelming majority in legislative elections on Sunday , but after years of sniping from the sidelines, members have to get down to the difficult task of delivering on promises to fix the country\u2019s many ills. The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition, won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5, according to electoral authorities. The government\u2019s United Socialist Party will now have 55 seats.", "sentence_answer": "The political opposition here rode discontent over a failing economy to an overwhelming majority in legislative elections on Sunday , but after years of sniping from the sidelines, members have to get down to the difficult task of delivering on promises to fix the country\u2019s many ills."} +{"question": "Whta is the banner of the opposition in Venezuela?", "paragraph": "CARACAS, Venezuela \u2014 Now comes the hard part. The political opposition here rode discontent over a failing economy to an overwhelming majority in legislative elections on Sunday, but after years of sniping from the sidelines, members have to get down to the difficult task of delivering on promises to fix the country\u2019s many ills. The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition, won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5, according to electoral authorities. The government\u2019s United Socialist Party will now have 55 seats.", "answer": "Democratic Unity coalition", "sentence": "The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition , won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5, according to electoral authorities.", "paragraph_sentence": "CARACAS, Venezuela \u2014 Now comes the hard part. The political opposition here rode discontent over a failing economy to an overwhelming majority in legislative elections on Sunday, but after years of sniping from the sidelines, members have to get down to the difficult task of delivering on promises to fix the country\u2019s many ills. The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition , won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5, according to electoral authorities. The government\u2019s United Socialist Party will now have 55 seats.", "paragraph_answer": "CARACAS, Venezuela \u2014 Now comes the hard part. The political opposition here rode discontent over a failing economy to an overwhelming majority in legislative elections on Sunday, but after years of sniping from the sidelines, members have to get down to the difficult task of delivering on promises to fix the country\u2019s many ills. The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition , won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5, according to electoral authorities. The government\u2019s United Socialist Party will now have 55 seats.", "sentence_answer": "The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition , won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5, according to electoral authorities."} +{"question": "How many seats did the Democratic Unity coalition won in the last elections in Venezuela?", "paragraph": "CARACAS, Venezuela \u2014 Now comes the hard part. The political opposition here rode discontent over a failing economy to an overwhelming majority in legislative elections on Sunday, but after years of sniping from the sidelines, members have to get down to the difficult task of delivering on promises to fix the country\u2019s many ills. The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition, won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5, according to electoral authorities. The government\u2019s United Socialist Party will now have 55 seats.", "answer": "112", "sentence": "The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition, won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5, according to electoral authorities.", "paragraph_sentence": "CARACAS, Venezuela \u2014 Now comes the hard part. The political opposition here rode discontent over a failing economy to an overwhelming majority in legislative elections on Sunday, but after years of sniping from the sidelines, members have to get down to the difficult task of delivering on promises to fix the country\u2019s many ills. The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition, won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5, according to electoral authorities. The government\u2019s United Socialist Party will now have 55 seats.", "paragraph_answer": "CARACAS, Venezuela \u2014 Now comes the hard part. The political opposition here rode discontent over a failing economy to an overwhelming majority in legislative elections on Sunday, but after years of sniping from the sidelines, members have to get down to the difficult task of delivering on promises to fix the country\u2019s many ills. The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition, won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5, according to electoral authorities. The government\u2019s United Socialist Party will now have 55 seats.", "sentence_answer": "The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition, won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5, according to electoral authorities."} +{"question": "When the new National Assembly will be sworn?", "paragraph": "CARACAS, Venezuela \u2014 Now comes the hard part. The political opposition here rode discontent over a failing economy to an overwhelming majority in legislative elections on Sunday, but after years of sniping from the sidelines, members have to get down to the difficult task of delivering on promises to fix the country\u2019s many ills. The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition, won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5, according to electoral authorities. The government\u2019s United Socialist Party will now have 55 seats.", "answer": "Jan. 5", "sentence": "The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition, won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5 , according to electoral authorities.", "paragraph_sentence": "CARACAS, Venezuela \u2014 Now comes the hard part. The political opposition here rode discontent over a failing economy to an overwhelming majority in legislative elections on Sunday, but after years of sniping from the sidelines, members have to get down to the difficult task of delivering on promises to fix the country\u2019s many ills. The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition, won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5 , according to electoral authorities. The government\u2019s United Socialist Party will now have 55 seats.", "paragraph_answer": "CARACAS, Venezuela \u2014 Now comes the hard part. The political opposition here rode discontent over a failing economy to an overwhelming majority in legislative elections on Sunday, but after years of sniping from the sidelines, members have to get down to the difficult task of delivering on promises to fix the country\u2019s many ills. The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition, won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5 , according to electoral authorities. The government\u2019s United Socialist Party will now have 55 seats.", "sentence_answer": "The opposition, under the banner of the Democratic Unity coalition, won 112 of the 167 seats in the National Assembly, which will be sworn in Jan. 5 , according to electoral authorities."} +{"question": "Who could pressure Maduro?", "paragraph": "There are however, ways that the Assembly could pressure Mr. Maduro to shift course economically. It can remove cabinet ministers, like the finance minister, and it can vote to remove the directors of the central bank. An alternative would be for the Assembly and Mr. Maduro to find a way to work together, particularly on economic policy, perhaps even with the president appointing some opposition members to his cabinet. So far, Mr. Maduro has given no indication that he is open to that approach. He quickly accepted the opposition victory after results were released early Monday morning, but he also blamed what he called an economic war for his party\u2019s defeat, a war that he said was being waged against his government and the country by shadowy capitalist forces.", "answer": "Assembly", "sentence": "There are however, ways that the Assembly could pressure Mr. Maduro to shift course economically.", "paragraph_sentence": " There are however, ways that the Assembly could pressure Mr. Maduro to shift course economically. It can remove cabinet ministers, like the finance minister, and it can vote to remove the directors of the central bank. An alternative would be for the Assembly and Mr. Maduro to find a way to work together, particularly on economic policy, perhaps even with the president appointing some opposition members to his cabinet. So far, Mr. Maduro has given no indication that he is open to that approach. He quickly accepted the opposition victory after results were released early Monday morning, but he also blamed what he called an economic war for his party\u2019s defeat, a war that he said was being waged against his government and the country by shadowy capitalist forces.", "paragraph_answer": "There are however, ways that the Assembly could pressure Mr. Maduro to shift course economically. It can remove cabinet ministers, like the finance minister, and it can vote to remove the directors of the central bank. An alternative would be for the Assembly and Mr. Maduro to find a way to work together, particularly on economic policy, perhaps even with the president appointing some opposition members to his cabinet. So far, Mr. Maduro has given no indication that he is open to that approach. He quickly accepted the opposition victory after results were released early Monday morning, but he also blamed what he called an economic war for his party\u2019s defeat, a war that he said was being waged against his government and the country by shadowy capitalist forces.", "sentence_answer": "There are however, ways that the Assembly could pressure Mr. Maduro to shift course economically."} +{"question": "What positions the Assembly can remove?", "paragraph": "There are however, ways that the Assembly could pressure Mr. Maduro to shift course economically. It can remove cabinet ministers, like the finance minister, and it can vote to remove the directors of the central bank. An alternative would be for the Assembly and Mr. Maduro to find a way to work together, particularly on economic policy, perhaps even with the president appointing some opposition members to his cabinet. So far, Mr. Maduro has given no indication that he is open to that approach. He quickly accepted the opposition victory after results were released early Monday morning, but he also blamed what he called an economic war for his party\u2019s defeat, a war that he said was being waged against his government and the country by shadowy capitalist forces.", "answer": "cabinet ministers", "sentence": "It can remove cabinet ministers , like the finance minister, and it can vote to remove the directors of the central bank.", "paragraph_sentence": "There are however, ways that the Assembly could pressure Mr. Maduro to shift course economically. It can remove cabinet ministers , like the finance minister, and it can vote to remove the directors of the central bank. An alternative would be for the Assembly and Mr. Maduro to find a way to work together, particularly on economic policy, perhaps even with the president appointing some opposition members to his cabinet. So far, Mr. Maduro has given no indication that he is open to that approach. He quickly accepted the opposition victory after results were released early Monday morning, but he also blamed what he called an economic war for his party\u2019s defeat, a war that he said was being waged against his government and the country by shadowy capitalist forces.", "paragraph_answer": "There are however, ways that the Assembly could pressure Mr. Maduro to shift course economically. It can remove cabinet ministers , like the finance minister, and it can vote to remove the directors of the central bank. An alternative would be for the Assembly and Mr. Maduro to find a way to work together, particularly on economic policy, perhaps even with the president appointing some opposition members to his cabinet. So far, Mr. Maduro has given no indication that he is open to that approach. He quickly accepted the opposition victory after results were released early Monday morning, but he also blamed what he called an economic war for his party\u2019s defeat, a war that he said was being waged against his government and the country by shadowy capitalist forces.", "sentence_answer": "It can remove cabinet ministers , like the finance minister, and it can vote to remove the directors of the central bank."} +{"question": "What is another alternativa for Maduro and the Assembly?", "paragraph": "There are however, ways that the Assembly could pressure Mr. Maduro to shift course economically. It can remove cabinet ministers, like the finance minister, and it can vote to remove the directors of the central bank. An alternative would be for the Assembly and Mr. Maduro to find a way to work together, particularly on economic policy, perhaps even with the president appointing some opposition members to his cabinet. So far, Mr. Maduro has given no indication that he is open to that approach. He quickly accepted the opposition victory after results were released early Monday morning, but he also blamed what he called an economic war for his party\u2019s defeat, a war that he said was being waged against his government and the country by shadowy capitalist forces.", "answer": "find a way to work together", "sentence": "An alternative would be for the Assembly and Mr. Maduro to find a way to work together , particularly on economic policy, perhaps even with the president appointing some opposition members to his cabinet.", "paragraph_sentence": "There are however, ways that the Assembly could pressure Mr. Maduro to shift course economically. It can remove cabinet ministers, like the finance minister, and it can vote to remove the directors of the central bank. An alternative would be for the Assembly and Mr. Maduro to find a way to work together , particularly on economic policy, perhaps even with the president appointing some opposition members to his cabinet. So far, Mr. Maduro has given no indication that he is open to that approach. He quickly accepted the opposition victory after results were released early Monday morning, but he also blamed what he called an economic war for his party\u2019s defeat, a war that he said was being waged against his government and the country by shadowy capitalist forces.", "paragraph_answer": "There are however, ways that the Assembly could pressure Mr. Maduro to shift course economically. It can remove cabinet ministers, like the finance minister, and it can vote to remove the directors of the central bank. An alternative would be for the Assembly and Mr. Maduro to find a way to work together , particularly on economic policy, perhaps even with the president appointing some opposition members to his cabinet. So far, Mr. Maduro has given no indication that he is open to that approach. He quickly accepted the opposition victory after results were released early Monday morning, but he also blamed what he called an economic war for his party\u2019s defeat, a war that he said was being waged against his government and the country by shadowy capitalist forces.", "sentence_answer": "An alternative would be for the Assembly and Mr. Maduro to find a way to work together , particularly on economic policy, perhaps even with the president appointing some opposition members to his cabinet."} +{"question": "What eles can the president do to make it work?", "paragraph": "There are however, ways that the Assembly could pressure Mr. Maduro to shift course economically. It can remove cabinet ministers, like the finance minister, and it can vote to remove the directors of the central bank. An alternative would be for the Assembly and Mr. Maduro to find a way to work together, particularly on economic policy, perhaps even with the president appointing some opposition members to his cabinet. So far, Mr. Maduro has given no indication that he is open to that approach. He quickly accepted the opposition victory after results were released early Monday morning, but he also blamed what he called an economic war for his party\u2019s defeat, a war that he said was being waged against his government and the country by shadowy capitalist forces.", "answer": "appointing some opposition members to his cabinet", "sentence": "An alternative would be for the Assembly and Mr. Maduro to find a way to work together, particularly on economic policy, perhaps even with the president appointing some opposition members to his cabinet .", "paragraph_sentence": "There are however, ways that the Assembly could pressure Mr. Maduro to shift course economically. It can remove cabinet ministers, like the finance minister, and it can vote to remove the directors of the central bank. An alternative would be for the Assembly and Mr. Maduro to find a way to work together, particularly on economic policy, perhaps even with the president appointing some opposition members to his cabinet . So far, Mr. Maduro has given no indication that he is open to that approach. He quickly accepted the opposition victory after results were released early Monday morning, but he also blamed what he called an economic war for his party\u2019s defeat, a war that he said was being waged against his government and the country by shadowy capitalist forces.", "paragraph_answer": "There are however, ways that the Assembly could pressure Mr. Maduro to shift course economically. It can remove cabinet ministers, like the finance minister, and it can vote to remove the directors of the central bank. An alternative would be for the Assembly and Mr. Maduro to find a way to work together, particularly on economic policy, perhaps even with the president appointing some opposition members to his cabinet . So far, Mr. Maduro has given no indication that he is open to that approach. He quickly accepted the opposition victory after results were released early Monday morning, but he also blamed what he called an economic war for his party\u2019s defeat, a war that he said was being waged against his government and the country by shadowy capitalist forces.", "sentence_answer": "An alternative would be for the Assembly and Mr. Maduro to find a way to work together, particularly on economic policy, perhaps even with the president appointing some opposition members to his cabinet ."} +{"question": "Whe were the first results of the elections in Venezuela released?", "paragraph": "There are however, ways that the Assembly could pressure Mr. Maduro to shift course economically. It can remove cabinet ministers, like the finance minister, and it can vote to remove the directors of the central bank. An alternative would be for the Assembly and Mr. Maduro to find a way to work together, particularly on economic policy, perhaps even with the president appointing some opposition members to his cabinet. So far, Mr. Maduro has given no indication that he is open to that approach. He quickly accepted the opposition victory after results were released early Monday morning, but he also blamed what he called an economic war for his party\u2019s defeat, a war that he said was being waged against his government and the country by shadowy capitalist forces.", "answer": "early Monday morning", "sentence": "He quickly accepted the opposition victory after results were released early Monday morning , but he also blamed what he called an economic war for his party\u2019s defeat, a war that he said was being waged against his government and the country by shadowy capitalist forces.", "paragraph_sentence": "There are however, ways that the Assembly could pressure Mr. Maduro to shift course economically. It can remove cabinet ministers, like the finance minister, and it can vote to remove the directors of the central bank. An alternative would be for the Assembly and Mr. Maduro to find a way to work together, particularly on economic policy, perhaps even with the president appointing some opposition members to his cabinet. So far, Mr. Maduro has given no indication that he is open to that approach. He quickly accepted the opposition victory after results were released early Monday morning , but he also blamed what he called an economic war for his party\u2019s defeat, a war that he said was being waged against his government and the country by shadowy capitalist forces. ", "paragraph_answer": "There are however, ways that the Assembly could pressure Mr. Maduro to shift course economically. It can remove cabinet ministers, like the finance minister, and it can vote to remove the directors of the central bank. An alternative would be for the Assembly and Mr. Maduro to find a way to work together, particularly on economic policy, perhaps even with the president appointing some opposition members to his cabinet. So far, Mr. Maduro has given no indication that he is open to that approach. He quickly accepted the opposition victory after results were released early Monday morning , but he also blamed what he called an economic war for his party\u2019s defeat, a war that he said was being waged against his government and the country by shadowy capitalist forces.", "sentence_answer": "He quickly accepted the opposition victory after results were released early Monday morning , but he also blamed what he called an economic war for his party\u2019s defeat, a war that he said was being waged against his government and the country by shadowy capitalist forces."} +{"question": "Who received a $10,000 fine?", "paragraph": "MASON, Ohio \u2014 Days after making a remark to an opponent in Montreal that was picked up by on-court microphones and resulted in a $10,000 fine, Nick Kyrgios received a mixed reaction upon his arrival at his opening-round match at the Western & Southern Open. The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet, completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes.", "answer": "Nick Kyrgios", "sentence": "MASON, Ohio \u2014 Days after making a remark to an opponent in Montreal that was picked up by on-court microphones and resulted in a $10,000 fine, Nick Kyrgios received a mixed reaction upon his arrival at his opening-round match at the Western & Southern Open.", "paragraph_sentence": " MASON, Ohio \u2014 Days after making a remark to an opponent in Montreal that was picked up by on-court microphones and resulted in a $10,000 fine, Nick Kyrgios received a mixed reaction upon his arrival at his opening-round match at the Western & Southern Open. The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet, completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes.", "paragraph_answer": "MASON, Ohio \u2014 Days after making a remark to an opponent in Montreal that was picked up by on-court microphones and resulted in a $10,000 fine, Nick Kyrgios received a mixed reaction upon his arrival at his opening-round match at the Western & Southern Open. The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet, completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes.", "sentence_answer": "MASON, Ohio \u2014 Days after making a remark to an opponent in Montreal that was picked up by on-court microphones and resulted in a $10,000 fine, Nick Kyrgios received a mixed reaction upon his arrival at his opening-round match at the Western & Southern Open."} +{"question": "Why did Nick Kyrgios receive a $10,000 fine?", "paragraph": "MASON, Ohio \u2014 Days after making a remark to an opponent in Montreal that was picked up by on-court microphones and resulted in a $10,000 fine, Nick Kyrgios received a mixed reaction upon his arrival at his opening-round match at the Western & Southern Open. The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet, completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes.", "answer": "making a remark to an opponent in Montreal that was picked up by on-court microphones", "sentence": "MASON, Ohio \u2014 Days after making a remark to an opponent in Montreal that was picked up by on-court microphones and resulted in a $10,000 fine, Nick Kyrgios received a mixed reaction upon his arrival at his opening-round match at the Western & Southern Open.", "paragraph_sentence": " MASON, Ohio \u2014 Days after making a remark to an opponent in Montreal that was picked up by on-court microphones and resulted in a $10,000 fine, Nick Kyrgios received a mixed reaction upon his arrival at his opening-round match at the Western & Southern Open. The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet, completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes.", "paragraph_answer": "MASON, Ohio \u2014 Days after making a remark to an opponent in Montreal that was picked up by on-court microphones and resulted in a $10,000 fine, Nick Kyrgios received a mixed reaction upon his arrival at his opening-round match at the Western & Southern Open. The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet, completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes.", "sentence_answer": "MASON, Ohio \u2014 Days after making a remark to an opponent in Montreal that was picked up by on-court microphones and resulted in a $10,000 fine, Nick Kyrgios received a mixed reaction upon his arrival at his opening-round match at the Western & Southern Open."} +{"question": "The response of the crowd grew what during the match?", "paragraph": "MASON, Ohio \u2014 Days after making a remark to an opponent in Montreal that was picked up by on-court microphones and resulted in a $10,000 fine, Nick Kyrgios received a mixed reaction upon his arrival at his opening-round match at the Western & Southern Open. The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet, completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes.", "answer": "warmer", "sentence": "The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet, completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes.", "paragraph_sentence": "MASON, Ohio \u2014 Days after making a remark to an opponent in Montreal that was picked up by on-court microphones and resulted in a $10,000 fine, Nick Kyrgios received a mixed reaction upon his arrival at his opening-round match at the Western & Southern Open. The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet, completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes. ", "paragraph_answer": "MASON, Ohio \u2014 Days after making a remark to an opponent in Montreal that was picked up by on-court microphones and resulted in a $10,000 fine, Nick Kyrgios received a mixed reaction upon his arrival at his opening-round match at the Western & Southern Open. The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet, completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes.", "sentence_answer": "The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet, completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes."} +{"question": "Who completed a 6-2,6-1 victory?", "paragraph": "MASON, Ohio \u2014 Days after making a remark to an opponent in Montreal that was picked up by on-court microphones and resulted in a $10,000 fine, Nick Kyrgios received a mixed reaction upon his arrival at his opening-round match at the Western & Southern Open. The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet, completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes.", "answer": "Richard Gasquet", "sentence": "The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet , completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes.", "paragraph_sentence": "MASON, Ohio \u2014 Days after making a remark to an opponent in Montreal that was picked up by on-court microphones and resulted in a $10,000 fine, Nick Kyrgios received a mixed reaction upon his arrival at his opening-round match at the Western & Southern Open. The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet , completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes. ", "paragraph_answer": "MASON, Ohio \u2014 Days after making a remark to an opponent in Montreal that was picked up by on-court microphones and resulted in a $10,000 fine, Nick Kyrgios received a mixed reaction upon his arrival at his opening-round match at the Western & Southern Open. The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet , completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes.", "sentence_answer": "The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet , completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes."} +{"question": "Richard Gasquet completed his victory how quickly?", "paragraph": "MASON, Ohio \u2014 Days after making a remark to an opponent in Montreal that was picked up by on-court microphones and resulted in a $10,000 fine, Nick Kyrgios received a mixed reaction upon his arrival at his opening-round match at the Western & Southern Open. The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet, completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes.", "answer": "in just 56 minutes", "sentence": "The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet, completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes .", "paragraph_sentence": "MASON, Ohio \u2014 Days after making a remark to an opponent in Montreal that was picked up by on-court microphones and resulted in a $10,000 fine, Nick Kyrgios received a mixed reaction upon his arrival at his opening-round match at the Western & Southern Open. The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet, completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes . ", "paragraph_answer": "MASON, Ohio \u2014 Days after making a remark to an opponent in Montreal that was picked up by on-court microphones and resulted in a $10,000 fine, Nick Kyrgios received a mixed reaction upon his arrival at his opening-round match at the Western & Southern Open. The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet, completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes .", "sentence_answer": "The response of the large crowd grew warmer during the match, but that was short-lived \u2014 not because Kyrgios again set off controversy but because his opponent Tuesday, 12th-seeded Richard Gasquet, completed a 6-2, 6-1 victory in just 56 minutes ."} +{"question": "Kyrgios is of what nationality?", "paragraph": "\u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios, an Australian who was unseeded. \u201cRest \u2014 I think it\u2019s probably a good thing for me at the moment.\u201d Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis, had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour.", "answer": "Australian", "sentence": "\u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios, an Australian who was unseeded.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios, an Australian who was unseeded. \u201cRest \u2014 I think it\u2019s probably a good thing for me at the moment.\u201d Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis, had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios, an Australian who was unseeded. \u201cRest \u2014 I think it\u2019s probably a good thing for me at the moment.\u201d Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis, had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios, an Australian who was unseeded."} +{"question": "Who told Stan Wawrinka that someone was sleeping with his girlfriend?", "paragraph": "\u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios, an Australian who was unseeded. \u201cRest \u2014 I think it\u2019s probably a good thing for me at the moment.\u201d Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis, had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour.", "answer": "Kyrgios", "sentence": "\u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios , an Australian who was unseeded.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios , an Australian who was unseeded. \u201cRest \u2014 I think it\u2019s probably a good thing for me at the moment.\u201d Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis, had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios , an Australian who was unseeded. \u201cRest \u2014 I think it\u2019s probably a good thing for me at the moment.\u201d Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis, had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios , an Australian who was unseeded."} +{"question": "Kyrgios had an early what?", "paragraph": "\u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios, an Australian who was unseeded. \u201cRest \u2014 I think it\u2019s probably a good thing for me at the moment.\u201d Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis, had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour.", "answer": "exit", "sentence": "Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis, had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios, an Australian who was unseeded. \u201cRest \u2014 I think it\u2019s probably a good thing for me at the moment.\u201d Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis, had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios, an Australian who was unseeded. \u201cRest \u2014 I think it\u2019s probably a good thing for me at the moment.\u201d Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis, had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour.", "sentence_answer": "Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis, had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour."} +{"question": "Who is Stan Wawrinka's girlfriend?", "paragraph": "\u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios, an Australian who was unseeded. \u201cRest \u2014 I think it\u2019s probably a good thing for me at the moment.\u201d Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis, had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour.", "answer": "Donna Vekic", "sentence": "Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis, had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic , a player on the WTA Tour.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios, an Australian who was unseeded. \u201cRest \u2014 I think it\u2019s probably a good thing for me at the moment.\u201d Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis, had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic , a player on the WTA Tour. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios, an Australian who was unseeded. \u201cRest \u2014 I think it\u2019s probably a good thing for me at the moment.\u201d Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis, had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic , a player on the WTA Tour.", "sentence_answer": "Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis, had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic , a player on the WTA Tour."} +{"question": "Who was accused of sleeping with Stan Wawrinka's girlfriend?", "paragraph": "\u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios, an Australian who was unseeded. \u201cRest \u2014 I think it\u2019s probably a good thing for me at the moment.\u201d Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis, had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour.", "answer": "Thanasi Kokkinakis", "sentence": "Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis , had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios, an Australian who was unseeded. \u201cRest \u2014 I think it\u2019s probably a good thing for me at the moment.\u201d Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis , had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI\u2019m not a guy that needs too many matches before I play in a Grand Slam, so it\u2019s almost good preparation for me to go into the U.S. Open,\u201d said Kyrgios, an Australian who was unseeded. \u201cRest \u2014 I think it\u2019s probably a good thing for me at the moment.\u201d Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis , had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour.", "sentence_answer": "Kyrgios\u2019s early exit will at least allow him to avoid the vitriol that has been directed his way since Wednesday night, when he was heard telling Stan Wawrinka that a fellow Australian player, Thanasi Kokkinakis , had slept with Wawrinka\u2019s girlfriend, Donna Vekic, a player on the WTA Tour."} +{"question": "What is Kyrgios mother's first name?", "paragraph": "Remarks from Kyrgios\u2019s family only worsened his situation. His mother, Nill, said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201cA sledge for a sledge,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult. Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos, made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun. (The Cincinnati tournament reportedly denied Christos Kyrgios a credential to the player areas, although he sat in the front row for his brother\u2019s match against Gasquet.) Kyrgios on Tuesday declined to answer any direct questions about his or his family\u2019s remarks. On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison, his opponent in the first round of qualifying. After a testy handshake ended a match full of flare-ups, the two had to be separated by the chair umpire. Harrison then lumped in Kokkinakis \u2014 a young Greek-Australian with a prominent earring, like Kyrgios, but generally a far milder presence \u2014 with his maligned compatriot.", "answer": "Nill", "sentence": "His mother, Nill , said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201cA sledge for a sledge,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult.", "paragraph_sentence": "Remarks from Kyrgios\u2019s family only worsened his situation. His mother, Nill , said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201cA sledge for a sledge,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult. Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos, made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun. (The Cincinnati tournament reportedly denied Christos Kyrgios a credential to the player areas, although he sat in the front row for his brother\u2019s match against Gasquet.) Kyrgios on Tuesday declined to answer any direct questions about his or his family\u2019s remarks. On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison, his opponent in the first round of qualifying. After a testy handshake ended a match full of flare-ups, the two had to be separated by the chair umpire. Harrison then lumped in Kokkinakis \u2014 a young Greek-Australian with a prominent earring, like Kyrgios, but generally a far milder presence \u2014 with his maligned compatriot.", "paragraph_answer": "Remarks from Kyrgios\u2019s family only worsened his situation. His mother, Nill , said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201cA sledge for a sledge,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult. Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos, made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun. (The Cincinnati tournament reportedly denied Christos Kyrgios a credential to the player areas, although he sat in the front row for his brother\u2019s match against Gasquet.) Kyrgios on Tuesday declined to answer any direct questions about his or his family\u2019s remarks. On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison, his opponent in the first round of qualifying. After a testy handshake ended a match full of flare-ups, the two had to be separated by the chair umpire. Harrison then lumped in Kokkinakis \u2014 a young Greek-Australian with a prominent earring, like Kyrgios, but generally a far milder presence \u2014 with his maligned compatriot.", "sentence_answer": "His mother, Nill , said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201cA sledge for a sledge,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult."} +{"question": "What did Nill write on Twitter?", "paragraph": "Remarks from Kyrgios\u2019s family only worsened his situation. His mother, Nill, said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201cA sledge for a sledge,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult. Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos, made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun. (The Cincinnati tournament reportedly denied Christos Kyrgios a credential to the player areas, although he sat in the front row for his brother\u2019s match against Gasquet.) Kyrgios on Tuesday declined to answer any direct questions about his or his family\u2019s remarks. On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison, his opponent in the first round of qualifying. After a testy handshake ended a match full of flare-ups, the two had to be separated by the chair umpire. Harrison then lumped in Kokkinakis \u2014 a young Greek-Australian with a prominent earring, like Kyrgios, but generally a far milder presence \u2014 with his maligned compatriot.", "answer": "A sledge for a sledge", "sentence": "His mother, Nill, said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201c A sledge for a sledge ,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult.", "paragraph_sentence": "Remarks from Kyrgios\u2019s family only worsened his situation. His mother, Nill, said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201c A sledge for a sledge ,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult. Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos, made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun. (The Cincinnati tournament reportedly denied Christos Kyrgios a credential to the player areas, although he sat in the front row for his brother\u2019s match against Gasquet.) Kyrgios on Tuesday declined to answer any direct questions about his or his family\u2019s remarks. On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison, his opponent in the first round of qualifying. After a testy handshake ended a match full of flare-ups, the two had to be separated by the chair umpire. Harrison then lumped in Kokkinakis \u2014 a young Greek-Australian with a prominent earring, like Kyrgios, but generally a far milder presence \u2014 with his maligned compatriot.", "paragraph_answer": "Remarks from Kyrgios\u2019s family only worsened his situation. His mother, Nill, said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201c A sledge for a sledge ,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult. Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos, made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun. (The Cincinnati tournament reportedly denied Christos Kyrgios a credential to the player areas, although he sat in the front row for his brother\u2019s match against Gasquet.) Kyrgios on Tuesday declined to answer any direct questions about his or his family\u2019s remarks. On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison, his opponent in the first round of qualifying. After a testy handshake ended a match full of flare-ups, the two had to be separated by the chair umpire. Harrison then lumped in Kokkinakis \u2014 a young Greek-Australian with a prominent earring, like Kyrgios, but generally a far milder presence \u2014 with his maligned compatriot.", "sentence_answer": "His mother, Nill, said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201c A sledge for a sledge ,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult."} +{"question": "Who is Kyrgios's older brother?", "paragraph": "Remarks from Kyrgios\u2019s family only worsened his situation. His mother, Nill, said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201cA sledge for a sledge,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult. Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos, made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun. (The Cincinnati tournament reportedly denied Christos Kyrgios a credential to the player areas, although he sat in the front row for his brother\u2019s match against Gasquet.) Kyrgios on Tuesday declined to answer any direct questions about his or his family\u2019s remarks. On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison, his opponent in the first round of qualifying. After a testy handshake ended a match full of flare-ups, the two had to be separated by the chair umpire. Harrison then lumped in Kokkinakis \u2014 a young Greek-Australian with a prominent earring, like Kyrgios, but generally a far milder presence \u2014 with his maligned compatriot.", "answer": "Christos", "sentence": "Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos , made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun.", "paragraph_sentence": "Remarks from Kyrgios\u2019s family only worsened his situation. His mother, Nill, said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201cA sledge for a sledge,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult. Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos , made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun. (The Cincinnati tournament reportedly denied Christos Kyrgios a credential to the player areas, although he sat in the front row for his brother\u2019s match against Gasquet.) Kyrgios on Tuesday declined to answer any direct questions about his or his family\u2019s remarks. On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison, his opponent in the first round of qualifying. After a testy handshake ended a match full of flare-ups, the two had to be separated by the chair umpire. Harrison then lumped in Kokkinakis \u2014 a young Greek-Australian with a prominent earring, like Kyrgios, but generally a far milder presence \u2014 with his maligned compatriot.", "paragraph_answer": "Remarks from Kyrgios\u2019s family only worsened his situation. His mother, Nill, said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201cA sledge for a sledge,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult. Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos , made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun. (The Cincinnati tournament reportedly denied Christos Kyrgios a credential to the player areas, although he sat in the front row for his brother\u2019s match against Gasquet.) Kyrgios on Tuesday declined to answer any direct questions about his or his family\u2019s remarks. On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison, his opponent in the first round of qualifying. After a testy handshake ended a match full of flare-ups, the two had to be separated by the chair umpire. Harrison then lumped in Kokkinakis \u2014 a young Greek-Australian with a prominent earring, like Kyrgios, but generally a far milder presence \u2014 with his maligned compatriot.", "sentence_answer": "Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos , made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun."} +{"question": "Who was Kokkinakis's American opponent?", "paragraph": "Remarks from Kyrgios\u2019s family only worsened his situation. His mother, Nill, said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201cA sledge for a sledge,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult. Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos, made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun. (The Cincinnati tournament reportedly denied Christos Kyrgios a credential to the player areas, although he sat in the front row for his brother\u2019s match against Gasquet.) Kyrgios on Tuesday declined to answer any direct questions about his or his family\u2019s remarks. On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison, his opponent in the first round of qualifying. After a testy handshake ended a match full of flare-ups, the two had to be separated by the chair umpire. Harrison then lumped in Kokkinakis \u2014 a young Greek-Australian with a prominent earring, like Kyrgios, but generally a far milder presence \u2014 with his maligned compatriot.", "answer": "Ryan Harrison", "sentence": "On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison , his opponent in the first round of qualifying.", "paragraph_sentence": "Remarks from Kyrgios\u2019s family only worsened his situation. His mother, Nill, said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201cA sledge for a sledge,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult. Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos, made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun. (The Cincinnati tournament reportedly denied Christos Kyrgios a credential to the player areas, although he sat in the front row for his brother\u2019s match against Gasquet.) Kyrgios on Tuesday declined to answer any direct questions about his or his family\u2019s remarks. On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison , his opponent in the first round of qualifying. After a testy handshake ended a match full of flare-ups, the two had to be separated by the chair umpire. Harrison then lumped in Kokkinakis \u2014 a young Greek-Australian with a prominent earring, like Kyrgios, but generally a far milder presence \u2014 with his maligned compatriot.", "paragraph_answer": "Remarks from Kyrgios\u2019s family only worsened his situation. His mother, Nill, said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201cA sledge for a sledge,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult. Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos, made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun. (The Cincinnati tournament reportedly denied Christos Kyrgios a credential to the player areas, although he sat in the front row for his brother\u2019s match against Gasquet.) Kyrgios on Tuesday declined to answer any direct questions about his or his family\u2019s remarks. On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison , his opponent in the first round of qualifying. After a testy handshake ended a match full of flare-ups, the two had to be separated by the chair umpire. Harrison then lumped in Kokkinakis \u2014 a young Greek-Australian with a prominent earring, like Kyrgios, but generally a far milder presence \u2014 with his maligned compatriot.", "sentence_answer": "On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison , his opponent in the first round of qualifying."} +{"question": "Who was Kyrgios lumped in with?", "paragraph": "Remarks from Kyrgios\u2019s family only worsened his situation. His mother, Nill, said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201cA sledge for a sledge,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult. Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos, made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun. (The Cincinnati tournament reportedly denied Christos Kyrgios a credential to the player areas, although he sat in the front row for his brother\u2019s match against Gasquet.) Kyrgios on Tuesday declined to answer any direct questions about his or his family\u2019s remarks. On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison, his opponent in the first round of qualifying. After a testy handshake ended a match full of flare-ups, the two had to be separated by the chair umpire. Harrison then lumped in Kokkinakis \u2014 a young Greek-Australian with a prominent earring, like Kyrgios, but generally a far milder presence \u2014 with his maligned compatriot.", "answer": "Kokkinakis", "sentence": "On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison, his opponent in the first round of qualifying.", "paragraph_sentence": "Remarks from Kyrgios\u2019s family only worsened his situation. His mother, Nill, said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201cA sledge for a sledge,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult. Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos, made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun. (The Cincinnati tournament reportedly denied Christos Kyrgios a credential to the player areas, although he sat in the front row for his brother\u2019s match against Gasquet.) Kyrgios on Tuesday declined to answer any direct questions about his or his family\u2019s remarks. On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison, his opponent in the first round of qualifying. After a testy handshake ended a match full of flare-ups, the two had to be separated by the chair umpire. Harrison then lumped in Kokkinakis \u2014 a young Greek-Australian with a prominent earring, like Kyrgios, but generally a far milder presence \u2014 with his maligned compatriot.", "paragraph_answer": "Remarks from Kyrgios\u2019s family only worsened his situation. His mother, Nill, said his insult was justified because of Wawrinka\u2019s criticism of Kyrgios months earlier, writing on Twitter, \u201cA sledge for a sledge,\u201d while using an Australian term for an insult. Kyrgios\u2019s older brother, Christos, made crude comments about Vekic and threatening comments toward Wawrinka and was kicked off the air during a radio interview for making a crude pun. (The Cincinnati tournament reportedly denied Christos Kyrgios a credential to the player areas, although he sat in the front row for his brother\u2019s match against Gasquet.) Kyrgios on Tuesday declined to answer any direct questions about his or his family\u2019s remarks. On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison, his opponent in the first round of qualifying. After a testy handshake ended a match full of flare-ups, the two had to be separated by the chair umpire. Harrison then lumped in Kokkinakis \u2014 a young Greek-Australian with a prominent earring, like Kyrgios, but generally a far milder presence \u2014 with his maligned compatriot.", "sentence_answer": "On Saturday \u2014 on the same court where Kyrgios eventually lost Tuesday \u2014 Kokkinakis was again dragged into the fray, ending up in a heated altercation with the American Ryan Harrison, his opponent in the first round of qualifying."} +{"question": "Who was hiding behind tennis's genteel code of conduct?", "paragraph": "\u201cThese kids, they\u2019ve got to get under control,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cThey\u2019re going to get hurt.\u201d Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis\u2019s genteel code of conduct. \u201cIf he wants to get into it, I will bury him,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cWawrinka should\u2019ve decked Kyrgios, and I should deck that kid.\u201d Kokkinakis, however, distanced himself from Kyrgios, and said it was unfair to conflate the two. \u201cI let him know \u2014 I made it pretty clear that he can\u2019t be doing that,\u201d Kokkinakis said of Kyrgios\u2019s insult. \u201cIf he\u2019s got a problem, he\u2019s got to say it in private. The way he went about it definitely wasn\u2019t the right thing.\u201d The elder statesmen of the tour have been similarly indignant. \u201cObviously it\u2019s the talk of the locker room, and everybody has their opinion,\u201d Roger Federer said. \u201cBut I think that we all agree that he definitely crossed the line by a long shot. We\u2019re not used to that kind of talk in tennis.\u201d Federer suggested he might support further punishment for Kyrgios. \u201cA fine is one thing; we\u2019ll see if there\u2019s going to be more coming,\u201d Federer said. \u201cI haven\u2019t heard anything, but clearly it was very disappointing and not great for the sport, one that I think many players have tried to build up and make it a good image. We want kids to be wanting to get into this sport, I guess, because it\u2019s a nice sport, it\u2019s clean, it\u2019s fair, and all these things. I don\u2019t think there should be any room for that kind of talk.\u201d", "answer": "Kokkinakis and Kyrgios", "sentence": "Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis\u2019s genteel code of conduct.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThese kids, they\u2019ve got to get under control,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cThey\u2019re going to get hurt.\u201d Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis\u2019s genteel code of conduct. \u201cIf he wants to get into it, I will bury him,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cWawrinka should\u2019ve decked Kyrgios, and I should deck that kid.\u201d Kokkinakis, however, distanced himself from Kyrgios, and said it was unfair to conflate the two. \u201cI let him know \u2014 I made it pretty clear that he can\u2019t be doing that,\u201d Kokkinakis said of Kyrgios\u2019s insult. \u201cIf he\u2019s got a problem, he\u2019s got to say it in private. The way he went about it definitely wasn\u2019t the right thing.\u201d The elder statesmen of the tour have been similarly indignant. \u201cObviously it\u2019s the talk of the locker room, and everybody has their opinion,\u201d Roger Federer said. \u201cBut I think that we all agree that he definitely crossed the line by a long shot. We\u2019re not used to that kind of talk in tennis.\u201d Federer suggested he might support further punishment for Kyrgios. \u201cA fine is one thing; we\u2019ll see if there\u2019s going to be more coming,\u201d Federer said. \u201cI haven\u2019t heard anything, but clearly it was very disappointing and not great for the sport, one that I think many players have tried to build up and make it a good image. We want kids to be wanting to get into this sport, I guess, because it\u2019s a nice sport, it\u2019s clean, it\u2019s fair, and all these things. I don\u2019t think there should be any room for that kind of talk.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThese kids, they\u2019ve got to get under control,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cThey\u2019re going to get hurt.\u201d Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis\u2019s genteel code of conduct. \u201cIf he wants to get into it, I will bury him,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cWawrinka should\u2019ve decked Kyrgios, and I should deck that kid.\u201d Kokkinakis, however, distanced himself from Kyrgios, and said it was unfair to conflate the two. \u201cI let him know \u2014 I made it pretty clear that he can\u2019t be doing that,\u201d Kokkinakis said of Kyrgios\u2019s insult. \u201cIf he\u2019s got a problem, he\u2019s got to say it in private. The way he went about it definitely wasn\u2019t the right thing.\u201d The elder statesmen of the tour have been similarly indignant. \u201cObviously it\u2019s the talk of the locker room, and everybody has their opinion,\u201d Roger Federer said. \u201cBut I think that we all agree that he definitely crossed the line by a long shot. We\u2019re not used to that kind of talk in tennis.\u201d Federer suggested he might support further punishment for Kyrgios. \u201cA fine is one thing; we\u2019ll see if there\u2019s going to be more coming,\u201d Federer said. \u201cI haven\u2019t heard anything, but clearly it was very disappointing and not great for the sport, one that I think many players have tried to build up and make it a good image. We want kids to be wanting to get into this sport, I guess, because it\u2019s a nice sport, it\u2019s clean, it\u2019s fair, and all these things. I don\u2019t think there should be any room for that kind of talk.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis\u2019s genteel code of conduct."} +{"question": "Who distanced himself from Kyrgios?", "paragraph": "\u201cThese kids, they\u2019ve got to get under control,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cThey\u2019re going to get hurt.\u201d Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis\u2019s genteel code of conduct. \u201cIf he wants to get into it, I will bury him,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cWawrinka should\u2019ve decked Kyrgios, and I should deck that kid.\u201d Kokkinakis, however, distanced himself from Kyrgios, and said it was unfair to conflate the two. \u201cI let him know \u2014 I made it pretty clear that he can\u2019t be doing that,\u201d Kokkinakis said of Kyrgios\u2019s insult. \u201cIf he\u2019s got a problem, he\u2019s got to say it in private. The way he went about it definitely wasn\u2019t the right thing.\u201d The elder statesmen of the tour have been similarly indignant. \u201cObviously it\u2019s the talk of the locker room, and everybody has their opinion,\u201d Roger Federer said. \u201cBut I think that we all agree that he definitely crossed the line by a long shot. We\u2019re not used to that kind of talk in tennis.\u201d Federer suggested he might support further punishment for Kyrgios. \u201cA fine is one thing; we\u2019ll see if there\u2019s going to be more coming,\u201d Federer said. \u201cI haven\u2019t heard anything, but clearly it was very disappointing and not great for the sport, one that I think many players have tried to build up and make it a good image. We want kids to be wanting to get into this sport, I guess, because it\u2019s a nice sport, it\u2019s clean, it\u2019s fair, and all these things. I don\u2019t think there should be any room for that kind of talk.\u201d", "answer": "Kokkinakis", "sentence": "Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis\u2019s genteel code of conduct.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThese kids, they\u2019ve got to get under control,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cThey\u2019re going to get hurt.\u201d Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis\u2019s genteel code of conduct. \u201cIf he wants to get into it, I will bury him,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cWawrinka should\u2019ve decked Kyrgios, and I should deck that kid.\u201d Kokkinakis, however, distanced himself from Kyrgios, and said it was unfair to conflate the two. \u201cI let him know \u2014 I made it pretty clear that he can\u2019t be doing that,\u201d Kokkinakis said of Kyrgios\u2019s insult. \u201cIf he\u2019s got a problem, he\u2019s got to say it in private. The way he went about it definitely wasn\u2019t the right thing.\u201d The elder statesmen of the tour have been similarly indignant. \u201cObviously it\u2019s the talk of the locker room, and everybody has their opinion,\u201d Roger Federer said. \u201cBut I think that we all agree that he definitely crossed the line by a long shot. We\u2019re not used to that kind of talk in tennis.\u201d Federer suggested he might support further punishment for Kyrgios. \u201cA fine is one thing; we\u2019ll see if there\u2019s going to be more coming,\u201d Federer said. \u201cI haven\u2019t heard anything, but clearly it was very disappointing and not great for the sport, one that I think many players have tried to build up and make it a good image. We want kids to be wanting to get into this sport, I guess, because it\u2019s a nice sport, it\u2019s clean, it\u2019s fair, and all these things. I don\u2019t think there should be any room for that kind of talk.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThese kids, they\u2019ve got to get under control,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cThey\u2019re going to get hurt.\u201d Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis\u2019s genteel code of conduct. \u201cIf he wants to get into it, I will bury him,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cWawrinka should\u2019ve decked Kyrgios, and I should deck that kid.\u201d Kokkinakis, however, distanced himself from Kyrgios, and said it was unfair to conflate the two. \u201cI let him know \u2014 I made it pretty clear that he can\u2019t be doing that,\u201d Kokkinakis said of Kyrgios\u2019s insult. \u201cIf he\u2019s got a problem, he\u2019s got to say it in private. The way he went about it definitely wasn\u2019t the right thing.\u201d The elder statesmen of the tour have been similarly indignant. \u201cObviously it\u2019s the talk of the locker room, and everybody has their opinion,\u201d Roger Federer said. \u201cBut I think that we all agree that he definitely crossed the line by a long shot. We\u2019re not used to that kind of talk in tennis.\u201d Federer suggested he might support further punishment for Kyrgios. \u201cA fine is one thing; we\u2019ll see if there\u2019s going to be more coming,\u201d Federer said. \u201cI haven\u2019t heard anything, but clearly it was very disappointing and not great for the sport, one that I think many players have tried to build up and make it a good image. We want kids to be wanting to get into this sport, I guess, because it\u2019s a nice sport, it\u2019s clean, it\u2019s fair, and all these things. I don\u2019t think there should be any room for that kind of talk.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis\u2019s genteel code of conduct."} +{"question": "Who has been indignant?", "paragraph": "\u201cThese kids, they\u2019ve got to get under control,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cThey\u2019re going to get hurt.\u201d Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis\u2019s genteel code of conduct. \u201cIf he wants to get into it, I will bury him,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cWawrinka should\u2019ve decked Kyrgios, and I should deck that kid.\u201d Kokkinakis, however, distanced himself from Kyrgios, and said it was unfair to conflate the two. \u201cI let him know \u2014 I made it pretty clear that he can\u2019t be doing that,\u201d Kokkinakis said of Kyrgios\u2019s insult. \u201cIf he\u2019s got a problem, he\u2019s got to say it in private. The way he went about it definitely wasn\u2019t the right thing.\u201d The elder statesmen of the tour have been similarly indignant. \u201cObviously it\u2019s the talk of the locker room, and everybody has their opinion,\u201d Roger Federer said. \u201cBut I think that we all agree that he definitely crossed the line by a long shot. We\u2019re not used to that kind of talk in tennis.\u201d Federer suggested he might support further punishment for Kyrgios. \u201cA fine is one thing; we\u2019ll see if there\u2019s going to be more coming,\u201d Federer said. \u201cI haven\u2019t heard anything, but clearly it was very disappointing and not great for the sport, one that I think many players have tried to build up and make it a good image. We want kids to be wanting to get into this sport, I guess, because it\u2019s a nice sport, it\u2019s clean, it\u2019s fair, and all these things. I don\u2019t think there should be any room for that kind of talk.\u201d", "answer": "The elder statesmen of the tour", "sentence": "The way he went about it definitely wasn\u2019t the right thing.\u201d The elder statesmen of the tour have been similarly indignant.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThese kids, they\u2019ve got to get under control,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cThey\u2019re going to get hurt.\u201d Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis\u2019s genteel code of conduct. \u201cIf he wants to get into it, I will bury him,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cWawrinka should\u2019ve decked Kyrgios, and I should deck that kid.\u201d Kokkinakis, however, distanced himself from Kyrgios, and said it was unfair to conflate the two. \u201cI let him know \u2014 I made it pretty clear that he can\u2019t be doing that,\u201d Kokkinakis said of Kyrgios\u2019s insult. \u201cIf he\u2019s got a problem, he\u2019s got to say it in private. The way he went about it definitely wasn\u2019t the right thing.\u201d The elder statesmen of the tour have been similarly indignant. \u201cObviously it\u2019s the talk of the locker room, and everybody has their opinion,\u201d Roger Federer said. \u201cBut I think that we all agree that he definitely crossed the line by a long shot. We\u2019re not used to that kind of talk in tennis.\u201d Federer suggested he might support further punishment for Kyrgios. \u201cA fine is one thing; we\u2019ll see if there\u2019s going to be more coming,\u201d Federer said. \u201cI haven\u2019t heard anything, but clearly it was very disappointing and not great for the sport, one that I think many players have tried to build up and make it a good image. We want kids to be wanting to get into this sport, I guess, because it\u2019s a nice sport, it\u2019s clean, it\u2019s fair, and all these things. I don\u2019t think there should be any room for that kind of talk.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThese kids, they\u2019ve got to get under control,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cThey\u2019re going to get hurt.\u201d Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis\u2019s genteel code of conduct. \u201cIf he wants to get into it, I will bury him,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cWawrinka should\u2019ve decked Kyrgios, and I should deck that kid.\u201d Kokkinakis, however, distanced himself from Kyrgios, and said it was unfair to conflate the two. \u201cI let him know \u2014 I made it pretty clear that he can\u2019t be doing that,\u201d Kokkinakis said of Kyrgios\u2019s insult. \u201cIf he\u2019s got a problem, he\u2019s got to say it in private. The way he went about it definitely wasn\u2019t the right thing.\u201d The elder statesmen of the tour have been similarly indignant. \u201cObviously it\u2019s the talk of the locker room, and everybody has their opinion,\u201d Roger Federer said. \u201cBut I think that we all agree that he definitely crossed the line by a long shot. We\u2019re not used to that kind of talk in tennis.\u201d Federer suggested he might support further punishment for Kyrgios. \u201cA fine is one thing; we\u2019ll see if there\u2019s going to be more coming,\u201d Federer said. \u201cI haven\u2019t heard anything, but clearly it was very disappointing and not great for the sport, one that I think many players have tried to build up and make it a good image. We want kids to be wanting to get into this sport, I guess, because it\u2019s a nice sport, it\u2019s clean, it\u2019s fair, and all these things. I don\u2019t think there should be any room for that kind of talk.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The way he went about it definitely wasn\u2019t the right thing.\u201d The elder statesmen of the tour have been similarly indignant."} +{"question": "Who might support further punishment for Kyrgios?", "paragraph": "\u201cThese kids, they\u2019ve got to get under control,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cThey\u2019re going to get hurt.\u201d Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis\u2019s genteel code of conduct. \u201cIf he wants to get into it, I will bury him,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cWawrinka should\u2019ve decked Kyrgios, and I should deck that kid.\u201d Kokkinakis, however, distanced himself from Kyrgios, and said it was unfair to conflate the two. \u201cI let him know \u2014 I made it pretty clear that he can\u2019t be doing that,\u201d Kokkinakis said of Kyrgios\u2019s insult. \u201cIf he\u2019s got a problem, he\u2019s got to say it in private. The way he went about it definitely wasn\u2019t the right thing.\u201d The elder statesmen of the tour have been similarly indignant. \u201cObviously it\u2019s the talk of the locker room, and everybody has their opinion,\u201d Roger Federer said. \u201cBut I think that we all agree that he definitely crossed the line by a long shot. We\u2019re not used to that kind of talk in tennis.\u201d Federer suggested he might support further punishment for Kyrgios. \u201cA fine is one thing; we\u2019ll see if there\u2019s going to be more coming,\u201d Federer said. \u201cI haven\u2019t heard anything, but clearly it was very disappointing and not great for the sport, one that I think many players have tried to build up and make it a good image. We want kids to be wanting to get into this sport, I guess, because it\u2019s a nice sport, it\u2019s clean, it\u2019s fair, and all these things. I don\u2019t think there should be any room for that kind of talk.\u201d", "answer": "Federer", "sentence": "\u201cObviously it\u2019s the talk of the locker room, and everybody has their opinion,\u201d Roger Federer said.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThese kids, they\u2019ve got to get under control,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cThey\u2019re going to get hurt.\u201d Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis\u2019s genteel code of conduct. \u201cIf he wants to get into it, I will bury him,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cWawrinka should\u2019ve decked Kyrgios, and I should deck that kid.\u201d Kokkinakis, however, distanced himself from Kyrgios, and said it was unfair to conflate the two. \u201cI let him know \u2014 I made it pretty clear that he can\u2019t be doing that,\u201d Kokkinakis said of Kyrgios\u2019s insult. \u201cIf he\u2019s got a problem, he\u2019s got to say it in private. The way he went about it definitely wasn\u2019t the right thing.\u201d The elder statesmen of the tour have been similarly indignant. \u201cObviously it\u2019s the talk of the locker room, and everybody has their opinion,\u201d Roger Federer said. \u201cBut I think that we all agree that he definitely crossed the line by a long shot. We\u2019re not used to that kind of talk in tennis.\u201d Federer suggested he might support further punishment for Kyrgios. \u201cA fine is one thing; we\u2019ll see if there\u2019s going to be more coming,\u201d Federer said. \u201cI haven\u2019t heard anything, but clearly it was very disappointing and not great for the sport, one that I think many players have tried to build up and make it a good image. We want kids to be wanting to get into this sport, I guess, because it\u2019s a nice sport, it\u2019s clean, it\u2019s fair, and all these things. I don\u2019t think there should be any room for that kind of talk.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThese kids, they\u2019ve got to get under control,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cThey\u2019re going to get hurt.\u201d Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis\u2019s genteel code of conduct. \u201cIf he wants to get into it, I will bury him,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cWawrinka should\u2019ve decked Kyrgios, and I should deck that kid.\u201d Kokkinakis, however, distanced himself from Kyrgios, and said it was unfair to conflate the two. \u201cI let him know \u2014 I made it pretty clear that he can\u2019t be doing that,\u201d Kokkinakis said of Kyrgios\u2019s insult. \u201cIf he\u2019s got a problem, he\u2019s got to say it in private. The way he went about it definitely wasn\u2019t the right thing.\u201d The elder statesmen of the tour have been similarly indignant. \u201cObviously it\u2019s the talk of the locker room, and everybody has their opinion,\u201d Roger Federer said. \u201cBut I think that we all agree that he definitely crossed the line by a long shot. We\u2019re not used to that kind of talk in tennis.\u201d Federer suggested he might support further punishment for Kyrgios. \u201cA fine is one thing; we\u2019ll see if there\u2019s going to be more coming,\u201d Federer said. \u201cI haven\u2019t heard anything, but clearly it was very disappointing and not great for the sport, one that I think many players have tried to build up and make it a good image. We want kids to be wanting to get into this sport, I guess, because it\u2019s a nice sport, it\u2019s clean, it\u2019s fair, and all these things. I don\u2019t think there should be any room for that kind of talk.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cObviously it\u2019s the talk of the locker room, and everybody has their opinion,\u201d Roger Federer said."} +{"question": "What sport does Kyrgios play?", "paragraph": "\u201cThese kids, they\u2019ve got to get under control,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cThey\u2019re going to get hurt.\u201d Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis\u2019s genteel code of conduct. \u201cIf he wants to get into it, I will bury him,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cWawrinka should\u2019ve decked Kyrgios, and I should deck that kid.\u201d Kokkinakis, however, distanced himself from Kyrgios, and said it was unfair to conflate the two. \u201cI let him know \u2014 I made it pretty clear that he can\u2019t be doing that,\u201d Kokkinakis said of Kyrgios\u2019s insult. \u201cIf he\u2019s got a problem, he\u2019s got to say it in private. The way he went about it definitely wasn\u2019t the right thing.\u201d The elder statesmen of the tour have been similarly indignant. \u201cObviously it\u2019s the talk of the locker room, and everybody has their opinion,\u201d Roger Federer said. \u201cBut I think that we all agree that he definitely crossed the line by a long shot. We\u2019re not used to that kind of talk in tennis.\u201d Federer suggested he might support further punishment for Kyrgios. \u201cA fine is one thing; we\u2019ll see if there\u2019s going to be more coming,\u201d Federer said. \u201cI haven\u2019t heard anything, but clearly it was very disappointing and not great for the sport, one that I think many players have tried to build up and make it a good image. We want kids to be wanting to get into this sport, I guess, because it\u2019s a nice sport, it\u2019s clean, it\u2019s fair, and all these things. I don\u2019t think there should be any room for that kind of talk.\u201d", "answer": "tennis", "sentence": "Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis \u2019s genteel code of conduct.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThese kids, they\u2019ve got to get under control,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cThey\u2019re going to get hurt.\u201d Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis \u2019s genteel code of conduct. \u201cIf he wants to get into it, I will bury him,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cWawrinka should\u2019ve decked Kyrgios, and I should deck that kid.\u201d Kokkinakis, however, distanced himself from Kyrgios, and said it was unfair to conflate the two. \u201cI let him know \u2014 I made it pretty clear that he can\u2019t be doing that,\u201d Kokkinakis said of Kyrgios\u2019s insult. \u201cIf he\u2019s got a problem, he\u2019s got to say it in private. The way he went about it definitely wasn\u2019t the right thing.\u201d The elder statesmen of the tour have been similarly indignant. \u201cObviously it\u2019s the talk of the locker room, and everybody has their opinion,\u201d Roger Federer said. \u201cBut I think that we all agree that he definitely crossed the line by a long shot. We\u2019re not used to that kind of talk in tennis.\u201d Federer suggested he might support further punishment for Kyrgios. \u201cA fine is one thing; we\u2019ll see if there\u2019s going to be more coming,\u201d Federer said. \u201cI haven\u2019t heard anything, but clearly it was very disappointing and not great for the sport, one that I think many players have tried to build up and make it a good image. We want kids to be wanting to get into this sport, I guess, because it\u2019s a nice sport, it\u2019s clean, it\u2019s fair, and all these things. I don\u2019t think there should be any room for that kind of talk.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThese kids, they\u2019ve got to get under control,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cThey\u2019re going to get hurt.\u201d Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis \u2019s genteel code of conduct. \u201cIf he wants to get into it, I will bury him,\u201d Harrison said. \u201cWawrinka should\u2019ve decked Kyrgios, and I should deck that kid.\u201d Kokkinakis, however, distanced himself from Kyrgios, and said it was unfair to conflate the two. \u201cI let him know \u2014 I made it pretty clear that he can\u2019t be doing that,\u201d Kokkinakis said of Kyrgios\u2019s insult. \u201cIf he\u2019s got a problem, he\u2019s got to say it in private. The way he went about it definitely wasn\u2019t the right thing.\u201d The elder statesmen of the tour have been similarly indignant. \u201cObviously it\u2019s the talk of the locker room, and everybody has their opinion,\u201d Roger Federer said. \u201cBut I think that we all agree that he definitely crossed the line by a long shot. We\u2019re not used to that kind of talk in tennis.\u201d Federer suggested he might support further punishment for Kyrgios. \u201cA fine is one thing; we\u2019ll see if there\u2019s going to be more coming,\u201d Federer said. \u201cI haven\u2019t heard anything, but clearly it was very disappointing and not great for the sport, one that I think many players have tried to build up and make it a good image. We want kids to be wanting to get into this sport, I guess, because it\u2019s a nice sport, it\u2019s clean, it\u2019s fair, and all these things. I don\u2019t think there should be any room for that kind of talk.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Harrison added that he believed Kokkinakis and Kyrgios were hiding behind tennis \u2019s genteel code of conduct."} +{"question": "Who was 16 when they arrived on this tour?", "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": "Rafael Nadal", "sentence": "Rafael Nadal expressed a similar sentiment.", "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": " Rafael Nadal expressed a similar sentiment."} +{"question": "How old is Kyrgios?", "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": "20", "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"} +{"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."} +{"question": "What does Nadal say the sport is?", "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": "a gentleman\u2019s sport", "sentence": "Our sport is a gentleman\u2019s sport .", "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": "Our sport is a gentleman\u2019s sport ."} +{"question": "Players are in front of what on the court?", "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": "cameras", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "Which city does the nonprofit Fund for Public Schools raise money for?", "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": "New York City", "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.", "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 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."} +{"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"} +{"question": "What's the name of the chancellor that appointed Iris Chen 16 months ago?", "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": "Carmen Fari\u00f1a", "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"} +{"question": "Under which mayor did the the Fund for Public Schools see a decline in fund-raising?", "paragraph": "The executive director of the Fund for Public Schools, a nonprofit that raises money for New York City public schools, abruptly resigned this week amid concerns about her management style and turnover on the fund\u2019s staff. The city\u2019s Education Department said the director, Iris Chen, who was appointed by Schools Chancellor Carmen Fari\u00f1a less than 16 months ago, had resigned \u201cto pursue other opportunities.\u201d But people who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were describing confidential discussions said that City Hall, the chancellor and the fund\u2019s board of directors had been worried about unhappiness among the fund\u2019s staff members and the departure of several crucial employees whom Ms. Chen had hired, among other issues. The fund, which under former Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg raised hundreds of millions of dollars for educational programs, has experienced declines in fund-raising under Mayor Bill de Blasio. Some education philanthropists were put off by Mr. de Blasio\u2019s criticism of charter schools. Ms. Chen, a former executive director of Teach for America\u2019s New York office, acknowledged in an interview this spring that early on she had been late to some meetings with donors.", "answer": "Bill de Blasio", "sentence": "The fund, which under former Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg raised hundreds of millions of dollars for educational programs, has experienced declines in fund-raising under Mayor Bill de Blasio .", "paragraph_sentence": "The executive director of the Fund for Public Schools, a nonprofit that raises money for New York City public schools, abruptly resigned this week amid concerns about her management style and turnover on the fund\u2019s staff. The city\u2019s Education Department said the director, Iris Chen, who was appointed by Schools Chancellor Carmen Fari\u00f1a less than 16 months ago, had resigned \u201cto pursue other opportunities.\u201d But people who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were describing confidential discussions said that City Hall, the chancellor and the fund\u2019s board of directors had been worried about unhappiness among the fund\u2019s staff members and the departure of several crucial employees whom Ms. Chen had hired, among other issues. The fund, which under former Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg raised hundreds of millions of dollars for educational programs, has experienced declines in fund-raising under Mayor Bill de Blasio . Some education philanthropists were put off by Mr. de Blasio\u2019s criticism of charter schools. Ms. Chen, a former executive director of Teach for America\u2019s New York office, acknowledged in an interview this spring that early on she had been late to some meetings with donors.", "paragraph_answer": "The executive director of the Fund for Public Schools, a nonprofit that raises money for New York City public schools, abruptly resigned this week amid concerns about her management style and turnover on the fund\u2019s staff. The city\u2019s Education Department said the director, Iris Chen, who was appointed by Schools Chancellor Carmen Fari\u00f1a less than 16 months ago, had resigned \u201cto pursue other opportunities.\u201d But people who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were describing confidential discussions said that City Hall, the chancellor and the fund\u2019s board of directors had been worried about unhappiness among the fund\u2019s staff members and the departure of several crucial employees whom Ms. Chen had hired, among other issues. The fund, which under former Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg raised hundreds of millions of dollars for educational programs, has experienced declines in fund-raising under Mayor Bill de Blasio . Some education philanthropists were put off by Mr. de Blasio\u2019s criticism of charter schools. Ms. Chen, a former executive director of Teach for America\u2019s New York office, acknowledged in an interview this spring that early on she had been late to some meetings with donors.", "sentence_answer": "The fund, which under former Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg raised hundreds of millions of dollars for educational programs, has experienced declines in fund-raising under Mayor Bill de Blasio ."} +{"question": "Which office in New York was Iris Chen formerly an executive director of?", "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": "Teach for America", "sentence": "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_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": "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."} +{"question": "How much money did the fund raise in 2015?", "paragraph": "As of mid-May, the fund had raised just $18 million in the 2015 fiscal year, compared with an average of $29 million a year over the last decade. The Education Department said on Tuesday that by June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the fund had raised $21.75 million, but it said it could not provide a list of new grants that were secured in May and June. Under Ms. Chen, the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21. Most recently, the chief financial officer left only a few months after she was hired. According to one of the people familiar with confidential discussions about the circumstances of Ms. Chen\u2019s departure, members of the board had been unsettled by a recent audit committee meeting in which Ms. Chen was unable to answer questions about the fund\u2019s finances. Ms. Chen, whose resignation was first reported by Politico New York, did not respond to an email. The Education Department\u2019s press office offered a statement on her behalf, saying she \u201cgreatly appreciated the opportunity to work with the chancellor and the city\u2019s extraordinary philanthropic community.\u201d The department said that Sarah Geisenheimer, a former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and a senior adviser to Ms. Fari\u00f1a, had been made acting executive director of the fund, effective immediately, and that it would conduct a formal search for a permanent executive director.", "answer": "$18 million", "sentence": "As of mid-May, the fund had raised just $18 million in the 2015 fiscal year, compared with an average of $29 million a year over the last decade.", "paragraph_sentence": " As of mid-May, the fund had raised just $18 million in the 2015 fiscal year, compared with an average of $29 million a year over the last decade. The Education Department said on Tuesday that by June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the fund had raised $21.75 million, but it said it could not provide a list of new grants that were secured in May and June. Under Ms. Chen, the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21. Most recently, the chief financial officer left only a few months after she was hired. According to one of the people familiar with confidential discussions about the circumstances of Ms. Chen\u2019s departure, members of the board had been unsettled by a recent audit committee meeting in which Ms. Chen was unable to answer questions about the fund\u2019s finances. Ms. Chen, whose resignation was first reported by Politico New York, did not respond to an email. The Education Department\u2019s press office offered a statement on her behalf, saying she \u201cgreatly appreciated the opportunity to work with the chancellor and the city\u2019s extraordinary philanthropic community.\u201d The department said that Sarah Geisenheimer, a former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and a senior adviser to Ms. Fari\u00f1a, had been made acting executive director of the fund, effective immediately, and that it would conduct a formal search for a permanent executive director.", "paragraph_answer": "As of mid-May, the fund had raised just $18 million in the 2015 fiscal year, compared with an average of $29 million a year over the last decade. The Education Department said on Tuesday that by June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the fund had raised $21.75 million, but it said it could not provide a list of new grants that were secured in May and June. Under Ms. Chen, the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21. Most recently, the chief financial officer left only a few months after she was hired. According to one of the people familiar with confidential discussions about the circumstances of Ms. Chen\u2019s departure, members of the board had been unsettled by a recent audit committee meeting in which Ms. Chen was unable to answer questions about the fund\u2019s finances. Ms. Chen, whose resignation was first reported by Politico New York, did not respond to an email. The Education Department\u2019s press office offered a statement on her behalf, saying she \u201cgreatly appreciated the opportunity to work with the chancellor and the city\u2019s extraordinary philanthropic community.\u201d The department said that Sarah Geisenheimer, a former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and a senior adviser to Ms. Fari\u00f1a, had been made acting executive director of the fund, effective immediately, and that it would conduct a formal search for a permanent executive director.", "sentence_answer": "As of mid-May, the fund had raised just $18 million in the 2015 fiscal year, compared with an average of $29 million a year over the last decade."} +{"question": "Under which director did the organization's staff decline in number?", "paragraph": "As of mid-May, the fund had raised just $18 million in the 2015 fiscal year, compared with an average of $29 million a year over the last decade. The Education Department said on Tuesday that by June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the fund had raised $21.75 million, but it said it could not provide a list of new grants that were secured in May and June. Under Ms. Chen, the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21. Most recently, the chief financial officer left only a few months after she was hired. According to one of the people familiar with confidential discussions about the circumstances of Ms. Chen\u2019s departure, members of the board had been unsettled by a recent audit committee meeting in which Ms. Chen was unable to answer questions about the fund\u2019s finances. Ms. Chen, whose resignation was first reported by Politico New York, did not respond to an email. The Education Department\u2019s press office offered a statement on her behalf, saying she \u201cgreatly appreciated the opportunity to work with the chancellor and the city\u2019s extraordinary philanthropic community.\u201d The department said that Sarah Geisenheimer, a former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and a senior adviser to Ms. Fari\u00f1a, had been made acting executive director of the fund, effective immediately, and that it would conduct a formal search for a permanent executive director.", "answer": "Ms. Chen", "sentence": "Under Ms. Chen , the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21.", "paragraph_sentence": "As of mid-May, the fund had raised just $18 million in the 2015 fiscal year, compared with an average of $29 million a year over the last decade. The Education Department said on Tuesday that by June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the fund had raised $21.75 million, but it said it could not provide a list of new grants that were secured in May and June. Under Ms. Chen , the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21. Most recently, the chief financial officer left only a few months after she was hired. According to one of the people familiar with confidential discussions about the circumstances of Ms. Chen\u2019s departure, members of the board had been unsettled by a recent audit committee meeting in which Ms. Chen was unable to answer questions about the fund\u2019s finances. Ms. Chen, whose resignation was first reported by Politico New York, did not respond to an email. The Education Department\u2019s press office offered a statement on her behalf, saying she \u201cgreatly appreciated the opportunity to work with the chancellor and the city\u2019s extraordinary philanthropic community.\u201d The department said that Sarah Geisenheimer, a former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and a senior adviser to Ms. Fari\u00f1a, had been made acting executive director of the fund, effective immediately, and that it would conduct a formal search for a permanent executive director.", "paragraph_answer": "As of mid-May, the fund had raised just $18 million in the 2015 fiscal year, compared with an average of $29 million a year over the last decade. The Education Department said on Tuesday that by June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the fund had raised $21.75 million, but it said it could not provide a list of new grants that were secured in May and June. Under Ms. Chen , the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21. Most recently, the chief financial officer left only a few months after she was hired. According to one of the people familiar with confidential discussions about the circumstances of Ms. Chen\u2019s departure, members of the board had been unsettled by a recent audit committee meeting in which Ms. Chen was unable to answer questions about the fund\u2019s finances. Ms. Chen, whose resignation was first reported by Politico New York, did not respond to an email. The Education Department\u2019s press office offered a statement on her behalf, saying she \u201cgreatly appreciated the opportunity to work with the chancellor and the city\u2019s extraordinary philanthropic community.\u201d The department said that Sarah Geisenheimer, a former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and a senior adviser to Ms. Fari\u00f1a, had been made acting executive director of the fund, effective immediately, and that it would conduct a formal search for a permanent executive director.", "sentence_answer": "Under Ms. Chen , the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21."} +{"question": "How many people worked under Ms. Chen before it was reduced to 10?", "paragraph": "As of mid-May, the fund had raised just $18 million in the 2015 fiscal year, compared with an average of $29 million a year over the last decade. The Education Department said on Tuesday that by June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the fund had raised $21.75 million, but it said it could not provide a list of new grants that were secured in May and June. Under Ms. Chen, the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21. Most recently, the chief financial officer left only a few months after she was hired. According to one of the people familiar with confidential discussions about the circumstances of Ms. Chen\u2019s departure, members of the board had been unsettled by a recent audit committee meeting in which Ms. Chen was unable to answer questions about the fund\u2019s finances. Ms. Chen, whose resignation was first reported by Politico New York, did not respond to an email. The Education Department\u2019s press office offered a statement on her behalf, saying she \u201cgreatly appreciated the opportunity to work with the chancellor and the city\u2019s extraordinary philanthropic community.\u201d The department said that Sarah Geisenheimer, a former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and a senior adviser to Ms. Fari\u00f1a, had been made acting executive director of the fund, effective immediately, and that it would conduct a formal search for a permanent executive director.", "answer": "21", "sentence": "The Education Department said on Tuesday that by June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the fund had raised $ 21 .75 million, but it said it could not provide a list of new grants that were secured in May and June.", "paragraph_sentence": "As of mid-May, the fund had raised just $18 million in the 2015 fiscal year, compared with an average of $29 million a year over the last decade. The Education Department said on Tuesday that by June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the fund had raised $ 21 .75 million, but it said it could not provide a list of new grants that were secured in May and June. Under Ms. Chen, the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21. Most recently, the chief financial officer left only a few months after she was hired. According to one of the people familiar with confidential discussions about the circumstances of Ms. Chen\u2019s departure, members of the board had been unsettled by a recent audit committee meeting in which Ms. Chen was unable to answer questions about the fund\u2019s finances. Ms. Chen, whose resignation was first reported by Politico New York, did not respond to an email. The Education Department\u2019s press office offered a statement on her behalf, saying she \u201cgreatly appreciated the opportunity to work with the chancellor and the city\u2019s extraordinary philanthropic community.\u201d The department said that Sarah Geisenheimer, a former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and a senior adviser to Ms. Fari\u00f1a, had been made acting executive director of the fund, effective immediately, and that it would conduct a formal search for a permanent executive director.", "paragraph_answer": "As of mid-May, the fund had raised just $18 million in the 2015 fiscal year, compared with an average of $29 million a year over the last decade. The Education Department said on Tuesday that by June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the fund had raised $ 21 .75 million, but it said it could not provide a list of new grants that were secured in May and June. Under Ms. Chen, the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21. Most recently, the chief financial officer left only a few months after she was hired. According to one of the people familiar with confidential discussions about the circumstances of Ms. Chen\u2019s departure, members of the board had been unsettled by a recent audit committee meeting in which Ms. Chen was unable to answer questions about the fund\u2019s finances. Ms. Chen, whose resignation was first reported by Politico New York, did not respond to an email. The Education Department\u2019s press office offered a statement on her behalf, saying she \u201cgreatly appreciated the opportunity to work with the chancellor and the city\u2019s extraordinary philanthropic community.\u201d The department said that Sarah Geisenheimer, a former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and a senior adviser to Ms. Fari\u00f1a, had been made acting executive director of the fund, effective immediately, and that it would conduct a formal search for a permanent executive director.", "sentence_answer": "The Education Department said on Tuesday that by June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the fund had raised $ 21 .75 million, but it said it could not provide a list of new grants that were secured in May and June."} +{"question": "What were the questions about that Ms. Chen was unable to answer in a recent audit committee meeting?", "paragraph": "As of mid-May, the fund had raised just $18 million in the 2015 fiscal year, compared with an average of $29 million a year over the last decade. The Education Department said on Tuesday that by June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the fund had raised $21.75 million, but it said it could not provide a list of new grants that were secured in May and June. Under Ms. Chen, the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21. Most recently, the chief financial officer left only a few months after she was hired. According to one of the people familiar with confidential discussions about the circumstances of Ms. Chen\u2019s departure, members of the board had been unsettled by a recent audit committee meeting in which Ms. Chen was unable to answer questions about the fund\u2019s finances. Ms. Chen, whose resignation was first reported by Politico New York, did not respond to an email. The Education Department\u2019s press office offered a statement on her behalf, saying she \u201cgreatly appreciated the opportunity to work with the chancellor and the city\u2019s extraordinary philanthropic community.\u201d The department said that Sarah Geisenheimer, a former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and a senior adviser to Ms. Fari\u00f1a, had been made acting executive director of the fund, effective immediately, and that it would conduct a formal search for a permanent executive director.", "answer": "fund\u2019s finances", "sentence": "According to one of the people familiar with confidential discussions about the circumstances of Ms. Chen\u2019s departure, members of the board had been unsettled by a recent audit committee meeting in which Ms. Chen was unable to answer questions about the fund\u2019s finances .", "paragraph_sentence": "As of mid-May, the fund had raised just $18 million in the 2015 fiscal year, compared with an average of $29 million a year over the last decade. The Education Department said on Tuesday that by June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the fund had raised $21.75 million, but it said it could not provide a list of new grants that were secured in May and June. Under Ms. Chen, the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21. Most recently, the chief financial officer left only a few months after she was hired. According to one of the people familiar with confidential discussions about the circumstances of Ms. Chen\u2019s departure, members of the board had been unsettled by a recent audit committee meeting in which Ms. Chen was unable to answer questions about the fund\u2019s finances . Ms. Chen, whose resignation was first reported by Politico New York, did not respond to an email. The Education Department\u2019s press office offered a statement on her behalf, saying she \u201cgreatly appreciated the opportunity to work with the chancellor and the city\u2019s extraordinary philanthropic community.\u201d The department said that Sarah Geisenheimer, a former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and a senior adviser to Ms. Fari\u00f1a, had been made acting executive director of the fund, effective immediately, and that it would conduct a formal search for a permanent executive director.", "paragraph_answer": "As of mid-May, the fund had raised just $18 million in the 2015 fiscal year, compared with an average of $29 million a year over the last decade. The Education Department said on Tuesday that by June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the fund had raised $21.75 million, but it said it could not provide a list of new grants that were secured in May and June. Under Ms. Chen, the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21. Most recently, the chief financial officer left only a few months after she was hired. According to one of the people familiar with confidential discussions about the circumstances of Ms. Chen\u2019s departure, members of the board had been unsettled by a recent audit committee meeting in which Ms. Chen was unable to answer questions about the fund\u2019s finances . Ms. Chen, whose resignation was first reported by Politico New York, did not respond to an email. The Education Department\u2019s press office offered a statement on her behalf, saying she \u201cgreatly appreciated the opportunity to work with the chancellor and the city\u2019s extraordinary philanthropic community.\u201d The department said that Sarah Geisenheimer, a former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and a senior adviser to Ms. Fari\u00f1a, had been made acting executive director of the fund, effective immediately, and that it would conduct a formal search for a permanent executive director.", "sentence_answer": "According to one of the people familiar with confidential discussions about the circumstances of Ms. Chen\u2019s departure, members of the board had been unsettled by a recent audit committee meeting in which Ms. Chen was unable to answer questions about the fund\u2019s finances ."} +{"question": "What former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation was made executive director in place of Ms. Chen?", "paragraph": "As of mid-May, the fund had raised just $18 million in the 2015 fiscal year, compared with an average of $29 million a year over the last decade. The Education Department said on Tuesday that by June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the fund had raised $21.75 million, but it said it could not provide a list of new grants that were secured in May and June. Under Ms. Chen, the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21. Most recently, the chief financial officer left only a few months after she was hired. According to one of the people familiar with confidential discussions about the circumstances of Ms. Chen\u2019s departure, members of the board had been unsettled by a recent audit committee meeting in which Ms. Chen was unable to answer questions about the fund\u2019s finances. Ms. Chen, whose resignation was first reported by Politico New York, did not respond to an email. The Education Department\u2019s press office offered a statement on her behalf, saying she \u201cgreatly appreciated the opportunity to work with the chancellor and the city\u2019s extraordinary philanthropic community.\u201d The department said that Sarah Geisenheimer, a former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and a senior adviser to Ms. Fari\u00f1a, had been made acting executive director of the fund, effective immediately, and that it would conduct a formal search for a permanent executive director.", "answer": "Sarah Geisenheimer", "sentence": "The department said that Sarah Geisenheimer , a former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and a senior adviser to Ms. Fari\u00f1a, had been made acting executive director of the fund, effective immediately, and that it would conduct a formal search for a permanent executive director.", "paragraph_sentence": "As of mid-May, the fund had raised just $18 million in the 2015 fiscal year, compared with an average of $29 million a year over the last decade. The Education Department said on Tuesday that by June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the fund had raised $21.75 million, but it said it could not provide a list of new grants that were secured in May and June. Under Ms. Chen, the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21. Most recently, the chief financial officer left only a few months after she was hired. According to one of the people familiar with confidential discussions about the circumstances of Ms. Chen\u2019s departure, members of the board had been unsettled by a recent audit committee meeting in which Ms. Chen was unable to answer questions about the fund\u2019s finances. Ms. Chen, whose resignation was first reported by Politico New York, did not respond to an email. The Education Department\u2019s press office offered a statement on her behalf, saying she \u201cgreatly appreciated the opportunity to work with the chancellor and the city\u2019s extraordinary philanthropic community.\u201d The department said that Sarah Geisenheimer , a former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and a senior adviser to Ms. Fari\u00f1a, had been made acting executive director of the fund, effective immediately, and that it would conduct a formal search for a permanent executive director. ", "paragraph_answer": "As of mid-May, the fund had raised just $18 million in the 2015 fiscal year, compared with an average of $29 million a year over the last decade. The Education Department said on Tuesday that by June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the fund had raised $21.75 million, but it said it could not provide a list of new grants that were secured in May and June. Under Ms. Chen, the organization\u2019s staff shrank to 10, from 21. Most recently, the chief financial officer left only a few months after she was hired. According to one of the people familiar with confidential discussions about the circumstances of Ms. Chen\u2019s departure, members of the board had been unsettled by a recent audit committee meeting in which Ms. Chen was unable to answer questions about the fund\u2019s finances. Ms. Chen, whose resignation was first reported by Politico New York, did not respond to an email. The Education Department\u2019s press office offered a statement on her behalf, saying she \u201cgreatly appreciated the opportunity to work with the chancellor and the city\u2019s extraordinary philanthropic community.\u201d The department said that Sarah Geisenheimer , a former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and a senior adviser to Ms. Fari\u00f1a, had been made acting executive director of the fund, effective immediately, and that it would conduct a formal search for a permanent executive director.", "sentence_answer": "The department said that Sarah Geisenheimer , a former associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and a senior adviser to Ms. Fari\u00f1a, had been made acting executive director of the fund, effective immediately, and that it would conduct a formal search for a permanent executive director."} +{"question": "What company was a victim of a price-fixing scheme?", "paragraph": "Pointing to the same evidence, Motorola Mobility, one of the corporate victims of the price-fixing scheme, filed a follow-on civil antitrust suit, seeking damages from AU Optronics and other members of the cartel. But last November, a federal appeals court in Chicago tossed out Motorola\u2019s civil suit, saying the company\u2019s overseas subsidiaries could not reap the benefits of America\u2019s antitrust laws. The Supreme Court will say this month if it will take up the issue. But already, the case has brought to light the challenges of applying decades-old antitrust laws to today\u2019s global corporations and their often complex and far-flung supply chains.", "answer": "Motorola Mobility", "sentence": "Pointing to the same evidence, Motorola Mobility , one of the corporate victims of the price-fixing scheme, filed a follow-on civil antitrust suit, seeking damages from AU Optronics and other members of the cartel.", "paragraph_sentence": " Pointing to the same evidence, Motorola Mobility , one of the corporate victims of the price-fixing scheme, filed a follow-on civil antitrust suit, seeking damages from AU Optronics and other members of the cartel. But last November, a federal appeals court in Chicago tossed out Motorola\u2019s civil suit, saying the company\u2019s overseas subsidiaries could not reap the benefits of America\u2019s antitrust laws. The Supreme Court will say this month if it will take up the issue. But already, the case has brought to light the challenges of applying decades-old antitrust laws to today\u2019s global corporations and their often complex and far-flung supply chains.", "paragraph_answer": "Pointing to the same evidence, Motorola Mobility , one of the corporate victims of the price-fixing scheme, filed a follow-on civil antitrust suit, seeking damages from AU Optronics and other members of the cartel. But last November, a federal appeals court in Chicago tossed out Motorola\u2019s civil suit, saying the company\u2019s overseas subsidiaries could not reap the benefits of America\u2019s antitrust laws. The Supreme Court will say this month if it will take up the issue. But already, the case has brought to light the challenges of applying decades-old antitrust laws to today\u2019s global corporations and their often complex and far-flung supply chains.", "sentence_answer": "Pointing to the same evidence, Motorola Mobility , one of the corporate victims of the price-fixing scheme, filed a follow-on civil antitrust suit, seeking damages from AU Optronics and other members of the cartel."} +{"question": "Who did Motorola Mobility file a civil anti-trust suit against?", "paragraph": "Pointing to the same evidence, Motorola Mobility, one of the corporate victims of the price-fixing scheme, filed a follow-on civil antitrust suit, seeking damages from AU Optronics and other members of the cartel. But last November, a federal appeals court in Chicago tossed out Motorola\u2019s civil suit, saying the company\u2019s overseas subsidiaries could not reap the benefits of America\u2019s antitrust laws. The Supreme Court will say this month if it will take up the issue. But already, the case has brought to light the challenges of applying decades-old antitrust laws to today\u2019s global corporations and their often complex and far-flung supply chains.", "answer": "AU Optronics", "sentence": "Pointing to the same evidence, Motorola Mobility, one of the corporate victims of the price-fixing scheme, filed a follow-on civil antitrust suit, seeking damages from AU Optronics and other members of the cartel.", "paragraph_sentence": " Pointing to the same evidence, Motorola Mobility, one of the corporate victims of the price-fixing scheme, filed a follow-on civil antitrust suit, seeking damages from AU Optronics and other members of the cartel. But last November, a federal appeals court in Chicago tossed out Motorola\u2019s civil suit, saying the company\u2019s overseas subsidiaries could not reap the benefits of America\u2019s antitrust laws. The Supreme Court will say this month if it will take up the issue. But already, the case has brought to light the challenges of applying decades-old antitrust laws to today\u2019s global corporations and their often complex and far-flung supply chains.", "paragraph_answer": "Pointing to the same evidence, Motorola Mobility, one of the corporate victims of the price-fixing scheme, filed a follow-on civil antitrust suit, seeking damages from AU Optronics and other members of the cartel. But last November, a federal appeals court in Chicago tossed out Motorola\u2019s civil suit, saying the company\u2019s overseas subsidiaries could not reap the benefits of America\u2019s antitrust laws. The Supreme Court will say this month if it will take up the issue. But already, the case has brought to light the challenges of applying decades-old antitrust laws to today\u2019s global corporations and their often complex and far-flung supply chains.", "sentence_answer": "Pointing to the same evidence, Motorola Mobility, one of the corporate victims of the price-fixing scheme, filed a follow-on civil antitrust suit, seeking damages from AU Optronics and other members of the cartel."} +{"question": "What month did a federal appeals court toss out Motorola's suit?", "paragraph": "Pointing to the same evidence, Motorola Mobility, one of the corporate victims of the price-fixing scheme, filed a follow-on civil antitrust suit, seeking damages from AU Optronics and other members of the cartel. But last November, a federal appeals court in Chicago tossed out Motorola\u2019s civil suit, saying the company\u2019s overseas subsidiaries could not reap the benefits of America\u2019s antitrust laws. The Supreme Court will say this month if it will take up the issue. But already, the case has brought to light the challenges of applying decades-old antitrust laws to today\u2019s global corporations and their often complex and far-flung supply chains.", "answer": "November", "sentence": "But last November , a federal appeals court in Chicago tossed out Motorola\u2019s civil suit, saying the company\u2019s overseas subsidiaries could not reap the benefits of America\u2019s antitrust laws.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pointing to the same evidence, Motorola Mobility, one of the corporate victims of the price-fixing scheme, filed a follow-on civil antitrust suit, seeking damages from AU Optronics and other members of the cartel. But last November , a federal appeals court in Chicago tossed out Motorola\u2019s civil suit, saying the company\u2019s overseas subsidiaries could not reap the benefits of America\u2019s antitrust laws. The Supreme Court will say this month if it will take up the issue. But already, the case has brought to light the challenges of applying decades-old antitrust laws to today\u2019s global corporations and their often complex and far-flung supply chains.", "paragraph_answer": "Pointing to the same evidence, Motorola Mobility, one of the corporate victims of the price-fixing scheme, filed a follow-on civil antitrust suit, seeking damages from AU Optronics and other members of the cartel. But last November , a federal appeals court in Chicago tossed out Motorola\u2019s civil suit, saying the company\u2019s overseas subsidiaries could not reap the benefits of America\u2019s antitrust laws. The Supreme Court will say this month if it will take up the issue. But already, the case has brought to light the challenges of applying decades-old antitrust laws to today\u2019s global corporations and their often complex and far-flung supply chains.", "sentence_answer": "But last November , a federal appeals court in Chicago tossed out Motorola\u2019s civil suit, saying the company\u2019s overseas subsidiaries could not reap the benefits of America\u2019s antitrust laws."} +{"question": "Where is the appeals court located?", "paragraph": "Pointing to the same evidence, Motorola Mobility, one of the corporate victims of the price-fixing scheme, filed a follow-on civil antitrust suit, seeking damages from AU Optronics and other members of the cartel. But last November, a federal appeals court in Chicago tossed out Motorola\u2019s civil suit, saying the company\u2019s overseas subsidiaries could not reap the benefits of America\u2019s antitrust laws. The Supreme Court will say this month if it will take up the issue. But already, the case has brought to light the challenges of applying decades-old antitrust laws to today\u2019s global corporations and their often complex and far-flung supply chains.", "answer": "Chicago", "sentence": "But last November, a federal appeals court in Chicago tossed out Motorola\u2019s civil suit, saying the company\u2019s overseas subsidiaries could not reap the benefits of America\u2019s antitrust laws.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pointing to the same evidence, Motorola Mobility, one of the corporate victims of the price-fixing scheme, filed a follow-on civil antitrust suit, seeking damages from AU Optronics and other members of the cartel. But last November, a federal appeals court in Chicago tossed out Motorola\u2019s civil suit, saying the company\u2019s overseas subsidiaries could not reap the benefits of America\u2019s antitrust laws. The Supreme Court will say this month if it will take up the issue. But already, the case has brought to light the challenges of applying decades-old antitrust laws to today\u2019s global corporations and their often complex and far-flung supply chains.", "paragraph_answer": "Pointing to the same evidence, Motorola Mobility, one of the corporate victims of the price-fixing scheme, filed a follow-on civil antitrust suit, seeking damages from AU Optronics and other members of the cartel. But last November, a federal appeals court in Chicago tossed out Motorola\u2019s civil suit, saying the company\u2019s overseas subsidiaries could not reap the benefits of America\u2019s antitrust laws. The Supreme Court will say this month if it will take up the issue. But already, the case has brought to light the challenges of applying decades-old antitrust laws to today\u2019s global corporations and their often complex and far-flung supply chains.", "sentence_answer": "But last November, a federal appeals court in Chicago tossed out Motorola\u2019s civil suit, saying the company\u2019s overseas subsidiaries could not reap the benefits of America\u2019s antitrust laws."} +{"question": "Who wrote a friend-of-the-court brief to the Supreme Court?", "paragraph": "Warning of the business impact of legal uncertainty, the National Association of Manufacturers wrote a friend-of-the-court brief urging the Supreme Court to take the case. The group said it took no position on the criminal or civil cases. Instead, the trade association called for clarity. \u201cCompanies,\u201d the brief states, \u201cneed to know where the legal lines are drawn in order to structure their transactions for goods intended for eventual import into the United States.\u201d Richard A. Posner, a federal appeals court judge and a prominent legal theorist, wrote the opinion in the Motorola case. His opinions, law scholars note, are as much conceptual essays as legal documents \u2014 often debated, and never boring. His ruling in a smartphone patent case in 2012, for example, was a sweeping critique of the patent system, describing it as a system in \u201cchaos.\u201d", "answer": "National Association of Manufacturers", "sentence": "Warning of the business impact of legal uncertainty, the National Association of Manufacturers wrote a friend-of-the-court brief urging the Supreme Court to take the case.", "paragraph_sentence": " Warning of the business impact of legal uncertainty, the National Association of Manufacturers wrote a friend-of-the-court brief urging the Supreme Court to take the case. The group said it took no position on the criminal or civil cases. Instead, the trade association called for clarity. \u201cCompanies,\u201d the brief states, \u201cneed to know where the legal lines are drawn in order to structure their transactions for goods intended for eventual import into the United States.\u201d Richard A. Posner, a federal appeals court judge and a prominent legal theorist, wrote the opinion in the Motorola case. His opinions, law scholars note, are as much conceptual essays as legal documents \u2014 often debated, and never boring. His ruling in a smartphone patent case in 2012, for example, was a sweeping critique of the patent system, describing it as a system in \u201cchaos.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Warning of the business impact of legal uncertainty, the National Association of Manufacturers wrote a friend-of-the-court brief urging the Supreme Court to take the case. The group said it took no position on the criminal or civil cases. Instead, the trade association called for clarity. \u201cCompanies,\u201d the brief states, \u201cneed to know where the legal lines are drawn in order to structure their transactions for goods intended for eventual import into the United States.\u201d Richard A. Posner, a federal appeals court judge and a prominent legal theorist, wrote the opinion in the Motorola case. His opinions, law scholars note, are as much conceptual essays as legal documents \u2014 often debated, and never boring. His ruling in a smartphone patent case in 2012, for example, was a sweeping critique of the patent system, describing it as a system in \u201cchaos.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Warning of the business impact of legal uncertainty, the National Association of Manufacturers wrote a friend-of-the-court brief urging the Supreme Court to take the case."} +{"question": "What did the trade association ask for?", "paragraph": "Warning of the business impact of legal uncertainty, the National Association of Manufacturers wrote a friend-of-the-court brief urging the Supreme Court to take the case. The group said it took no position on the criminal or civil cases. Instead, the trade association called for clarity. \u201cCompanies,\u201d the brief states, \u201cneed to know where the legal lines are drawn in order to structure their transactions for goods intended for eventual import into the United States.\u201d Richard A. Posner, a federal appeals court judge and a prominent legal theorist, wrote the opinion in the Motorola case. His opinions, law scholars note, are as much conceptual essays as legal documents \u2014 often debated, and never boring. His ruling in a smartphone patent case in 2012, for example, was a sweeping critique of the patent system, describing it as a system in \u201cchaos.\u201d", "answer": "clarity", "sentence": "Instead, the trade association called for clarity .", "paragraph_sentence": "Warning of the business impact of legal uncertainty, the National Association of Manufacturers wrote a friend-of-the-court brief urging the Supreme Court to take the case. The group said it took no position on the criminal or civil cases. Instead, the trade association called for clarity . \u201cCompanies,\u201d the brief states, \u201cneed to know where the legal lines are drawn in order to structure their transactions for goods intended for eventual import into the United States.\u201d Richard A. Posner, a federal appeals court judge and a prominent legal theorist, wrote the opinion in the Motorola case. His opinions, law scholars note, are as much conceptual essays as legal documents \u2014 often debated, and never boring. His ruling in a smartphone patent case in 2012, for example, was a sweeping critique of the patent system, describing it as a system in \u201cchaos.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Warning of the business impact of legal uncertainty, the National Association of Manufacturers wrote a friend-of-the-court brief urging the Supreme Court to take the case. The group said it took no position on the criminal or civil cases. Instead, the trade association called for clarity . \u201cCompanies,\u201d the brief states, \u201cneed to know where the legal lines are drawn in order to structure their transactions for goods intended for eventual import into the United States.\u201d Richard A. Posner, a federal appeals court judge and a prominent legal theorist, wrote the opinion in the Motorola case. His opinions, law scholars note, are as much conceptual essays as legal documents \u2014 often debated, and never boring. His ruling in a smartphone patent case in 2012, for example, was a sweeping critique of the patent system, describing it as a system in \u201cchaos.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Instead, the trade association called for clarity ."} +{"question": "What is the name of a federal appeals court judge and a prominent legal theorist?", "paragraph": "Warning of the business impact of legal uncertainty, the National Association of Manufacturers wrote a friend-of-the-court brief urging the Supreme Court to take the case. The group said it took no position on the criminal or civil cases. Instead, the trade association called for clarity. \u201cCompanies,\u201d the brief states, \u201cneed to know where the legal lines are drawn in order to structure their transactions for goods intended for eventual import into the United States.\u201d Richard A. Posner, a federal appeals court judge and a prominent legal theorist, wrote the opinion in the Motorola case. His opinions, law scholars note, are as much conceptual essays as legal documents \u2014 often debated, and never boring. His ruling in a smartphone patent case in 2012, for example, was a sweeping critique of the patent system, describing it as a system in \u201cchaos.\u201d", "answer": "Richard A. Posner", "sentence": "\u201cCompanies,\u201d the brief states, \u201cneed to know where the legal lines are drawn in order to structure their transactions for goods intended for eventual import into the United States.\u201d Richard A. Posner , a federal appeals court judge and a prominent legal theorist, wrote the opinion in the Motorola case.", "paragraph_sentence": "Warning of the business impact of legal uncertainty, the National Association of Manufacturers wrote a friend-of-the-court brief urging the Supreme Court to take the case. The group said it took no position on the criminal or civil cases. Instead, the trade association called for clarity. \u201cCompanies,\u201d the brief states, \u201cneed to know where the legal lines are drawn in order to structure their transactions for goods intended for eventual import into the United States.\u201d Richard A. Posner , a federal appeals court judge and a prominent legal theorist, wrote the opinion in the Motorola case. His opinions, law scholars note, are as much conceptual essays as legal documents \u2014 often debated, and never boring. His ruling in a smartphone patent case in 2012, for example, was a sweeping critique of the patent system, describing it as a system in \u201cchaos.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Warning of the business impact of legal uncertainty, the National Association of Manufacturers wrote a friend-of-the-court brief urging the Supreme Court to take the case. The group said it took no position on the criminal or civil cases. Instead, the trade association called for clarity. \u201cCompanies,\u201d the brief states, \u201cneed to know where the legal lines are drawn in order to structure their transactions for goods intended for eventual import into the United States.\u201d Richard A. Posner , a federal appeals court judge and a prominent legal theorist, wrote the opinion in the Motorola case. His opinions, law scholars note, are as much conceptual essays as legal documents \u2014 often debated, and never boring. His ruling in a smartphone patent case in 2012, for example, was a sweeping critique of the patent system, describing it as a system in \u201cchaos.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cCompanies,\u201d the brief states, \u201cneed to know where the legal lines are drawn in order to structure their transactions for goods intended for eventual import into the United States.\u201d Richard A. Posner , a federal appeals court judge and a prominent legal theorist, wrote the opinion in the Motorola case."} +{"question": "Who ruled on a crucial smartphone patent case in 2012?", "paragraph": "Warning of the business impact of legal uncertainty, the National Association of Manufacturers wrote a friend-of-the-court brief urging the Supreme Court to take the case. The group said it took no position on the criminal or civil cases. Instead, the trade association called for clarity. \u201cCompanies,\u201d the brief states, \u201cneed to know where the legal lines are drawn in order to structure their transactions for goods intended for eventual import into the United States.\u201d Richard A. Posner, a federal appeals court judge and a prominent legal theorist, wrote the opinion in the Motorola case. His opinions, law scholars note, are as much conceptual essays as legal documents \u2014 often debated, and never boring. His ruling in a smartphone patent case in 2012, for example, was a sweeping critique of the patent system, describing it as a system in \u201cchaos.\u201d", "answer": "Richard A. Posner", "sentence": "\u201cCompanies,\u201d the brief states, \u201cneed to know where the legal lines are drawn in order to structure their transactions for goods intended for eventual import into the United States.\u201d Richard A. Posner , a federal appeals court judge and a prominent legal theorist, wrote the opinion in the Motorola case.", "paragraph_sentence": "Warning of the business impact of legal uncertainty, the National Association of Manufacturers wrote a friend-of-the-court brief urging the Supreme Court to take the case. The group said it took no position on the criminal or civil cases. Instead, the trade association called for clarity. \u201cCompanies,\u201d the brief states, \u201cneed to know where the legal lines are drawn in order to structure their transactions for goods intended for eventual import into the United States.\u201d Richard A. Posner , a federal appeals court judge and a prominent legal theorist, wrote the opinion in the Motorola case. His opinions, law scholars note, are as much conceptual essays as legal documents \u2014 often debated, and never boring. His ruling in a smartphone patent case in 2012, for example, was a sweeping critique of the patent system, describing it as a system in \u201cchaos.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Warning of the business impact of legal uncertainty, the National Association of Manufacturers wrote a friend-of-the-court brief urging the Supreme Court to take the case. The group said it took no position on the criminal or civil cases. Instead, the trade association called for clarity. \u201cCompanies,\u201d the brief states, \u201cneed to know where the legal lines are drawn in order to structure their transactions for goods intended for eventual import into the United States.\u201d Richard A. Posner , a federal appeals court judge and a prominent legal theorist, wrote the opinion in the Motorola case. His opinions, law scholars note, are as much conceptual essays as legal documents \u2014 often debated, and never boring. His ruling in a smartphone patent case in 2012, for example, was a sweeping critique of the patent system, describing it as a system in \u201cchaos.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cCompanies,\u201d the brief states, \u201cneed to know where the legal lines are drawn in order to structure their transactions for goods intended for eventual import into the United States.\u201d Richard A. Posner , a federal appeals court judge and a prominent legal theorist, wrote the opinion in the Motorola case."} +{"question": "What did Posner call the patent system?", "paragraph": "Warning of the business impact of legal uncertainty, the National Association of Manufacturers wrote a friend-of-the-court brief urging the Supreme Court to take the case. The group said it took no position on the criminal or civil cases. Instead, the trade association called for clarity. \u201cCompanies,\u201d the brief states, \u201cneed to know where the legal lines are drawn in order to structure their transactions for goods intended for eventual import into the United States.\u201d Richard A. Posner, a federal appeals court judge and a prominent legal theorist, wrote the opinion in the Motorola case. His opinions, law scholars note, are as much conceptual essays as legal documents \u2014 often debated, and never boring. His ruling in a smartphone patent case in 2012, for example, was a sweeping critique of the patent system, describing it as a system in \u201cchaos.\u201d", "answer": "chaos", "sentence": "His ruling in a smartphone patent case in 2012, for example, was a sweeping critique of the patent system, describing it as a system in \u201c chaos .", "paragraph_sentence": "Warning of the business impact of legal uncertainty, the National Association of Manufacturers wrote a friend-of-the-court brief urging the Supreme Court to take the case. The group said it took no position on the criminal or civil cases. Instead, the trade association called for clarity. \u201cCompanies,\u201d the brief states, \u201cneed to know where the legal lines are drawn in order to structure their transactions for goods intended for eventual import into the United States.\u201d Richard A. Posner, a federal appeals court judge and a prominent legal theorist, wrote the opinion in the Motorola case. His opinions, law scholars note, are as much conceptual essays as legal documents \u2014 often debated, and never boring. His ruling in a smartphone patent case in 2012, for example, was a sweeping critique of the patent system, describing it as a system in \u201c chaos . \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Warning of the business impact of legal uncertainty, the National Association of Manufacturers wrote a friend-of-the-court brief urging the Supreme Court to take the case. The group said it took no position on the criminal or civil cases. Instead, the trade association called for clarity. \u201cCompanies,\u201d the brief states, \u201cneed to know where the legal lines are drawn in order to structure their transactions for goods intended for eventual import into the United States.\u201d Richard A. Posner, a federal appeals court judge and a prominent legal theorist, wrote the opinion in the Motorola case. His opinions, law scholars note, are as much conceptual essays as legal documents \u2014 often debated, and never boring. His ruling in a smartphone patent case in 2012, for example, was a sweeping critique of the patent system, describing it as a system in \u201c chaos .\u201d", "sentence_answer": "His ruling in a smartphone patent case in 2012, for example, was a sweeping critique of the patent system, describing it as a system in \u201c chaos ."} +{"question": "What was the score in Nishikori's match against Wawrinka before Nishikori's comeback?", "paragraph": "Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement. But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang, similarly slumping into his seat. The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals.", "answer": "6-1", "sentence": "Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement.", "paragraph_sentence": " Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement. But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang, similarly slumping into his seat. The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals.", "paragraph_answer": "Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement. But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang, similarly slumping into his seat. The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals.", "sentence_answer": "Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement."} +{"question": "Who was Nishikori's coach?", "paragraph": "Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement. But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang, similarly slumping into his seat. The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals.", "answer": "Michael Chang", "sentence": "But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang , similarly slumping into his seat.", "paragraph_sentence": "Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement. But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang , similarly slumping into his seat. The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals.", "paragraph_answer": "Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement. But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang , similarly slumping into his seat. The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals.", "sentence_answer": "But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang , similarly slumping into his seat."} +{"question": "How many consecutive points did Nishikori get in his match against Wawrinka?", "paragraph": "Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement. But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang, similarly slumping into his seat. The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals.", "answer": "five", "sentence": "Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement.", "paragraph_sentence": " Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement. But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang, similarly slumping into his seat. The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals.", "paragraph_answer": "Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement. But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang, similarly slumping into his seat. The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals.", "sentence_answer": "Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement."} +{"question": "Who won the match between Nishikori and Wawrinka?", "paragraph": "Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement. But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang, similarly slumping into his seat. The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals.", "answer": "Wawrinka", "sentence": "But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang, similarly slumping into his seat.", "paragraph_sentence": "Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement. But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang, similarly slumping into his seat. The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals.", "paragraph_answer": "Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement. But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang, similarly slumping into his seat. The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals.", "sentence_answer": "But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang, similarly slumping into his seat."} +{"question": "What bracket of the tournament were Nishikori and Warinka competing to enter?", "paragraph": "Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement. But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang, similarly slumping into his seat. The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals.", "answer": "semifinals", "sentence": "The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals .", "paragraph_sentence": "Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement. But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang, similarly slumping into his seat. The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals . ", "paragraph_answer": "Nishikori trailed by 6-1 in the third-set tiebreaker before he saved five consecutive match points to level the score at 6-6, sending the resigned crowd into unlikely excitement. But with Wawrinka pinned behind the baseline on the next point, an attempted drop shot by Nishikori hit the bottom of the net tape and slid down onto his side of the court, sending his coach, Michael Chang, similarly slumping into his seat. The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals .", "sentence_answer": "The error gave Wawrinka a sixth match point, which he converted with an ace for a spot in the semifinals ."} +{"question": "Which competition did Nishikori compete in last year?", "paragraph": "He added: \u201cI had the wind with me, so it was not easy to make a drop shot, especially at that moment. No, it was a crazy tiebreak, but good tiebreak. Good to finish in three sets.\u201d After his run to the final of the United States Open last year, which included a five-set win over Wawrinka in the quarterfinals, Nishikori was expected by many to move one step further at this tournament. Still, he said, reaching the last eight of this tournament was a strong result. \u201cIt\u2019s not easy,\u201d he said of making a Grand Slam quarterfinal, adding: \u201cI have to keep doing this. I mean, I could be better. But you know, I think I need, kind of, this experience, playing tough all the time, playing a lot of matches.\u201d Wawrinka said he believed his play was even better than it was here last year, when he beat Djokovic and Rafael Nadal en route to his first major title. \u201cBut I think we all improve every year,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cI\u2019m more aggressive. I\u2019m more confident with my game when I come to the net.", "answer": "United States Open", "sentence": "After his run to the final of the United States Open last year, which included a five-set win over Wawrinka in the quarterfinals, Nishikori was expected by many to move one step further at this tournament.", "paragraph_sentence": "He added: \u201cI had the wind with me, so it was not easy to make a drop shot, especially at that moment. No, it was a crazy tiebreak, but good tiebreak. Good to finish in three sets.\u201d After his run to the final of the United States Open last year, which included a five-set win over Wawrinka in the quarterfinals, Nishikori was expected by many to move one step further at this tournament. Still, he said, reaching the last eight of this tournament was a strong result. \u201cIt\u2019s not easy,\u201d he said of making a Grand Slam quarterfinal, adding: \u201cI have to keep doing this. I mean, I could be better. But you know, I think I need, kind of, this experience, playing tough all the time, playing a lot of matches.\u201d Wawrinka said he believed his play was even better than it was here last year, when he beat Djokovic and Rafael Nadal en route to his first major title. \u201cBut I think we all improve every year,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cI\u2019m more aggressive. I\u2019m more confident with my game when I come to the net.", "paragraph_answer": "He added: \u201cI had the wind with me, so it was not easy to make a drop shot, especially at that moment. No, it was a crazy tiebreak, but good tiebreak. Good to finish in three sets.\u201d After his run to the final of the United States Open last year, which included a five-set win over Wawrinka in the quarterfinals, Nishikori was expected by many to move one step further at this tournament. Still, he said, reaching the last eight of this tournament was a strong result. \u201cIt\u2019s not easy,\u201d he said of making a Grand Slam quarterfinal, adding: \u201cI have to keep doing this. I mean, I could be better. But you know, I think I need, kind of, this experience, playing tough all the time, playing a lot of matches.\u201d Wawrinka said he believed his play was even better than it was here last year, when he beat Djokovic and Rafael Nadal en route to his first major title. \u201cBut I think we all improve every year,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cI\u2019m more aggressive. I\u2019m more confident with my game when I come to the net.", "sentence_answer": "After his run to the final of the United States Open last year, which included a five-set win over Wawrinka in the quarterfinals, Nishikori was expected by many to move one step further at this tournament."} +{"question": "When Nishikori had a match against Wawrinka in last years United States Open, who won?", "paragraph": "He added: \u201cI had the wind with me, so it was not easy to make a drop shot, especially at that moment. No, it was a crazy tiebreak, but good tiebreak. Good to finish in three sets.\u201d After his run to the final of the United States Open last year, which included a five-set win over Wawrinka in the quarterfinals, Nishikori was expected by many to move one step further at this tournament. Still, he said, reaching the last eight of this tournament was a strong result. \u201cIt\u2019s not easy,\u201d he said of making a Grand Slam quarterfinal, adding: \u201cI have to keep doing this. I mean, I could be better. But you know, I think I need, kind of, this experience, playing tough all the time, playing a lot of matches.\u201d Wawrinka said he believed his play was even better than it was here last year, when he beat Djokovic and Rafael Nadal en route to his first major title. \u201cBut I think we all improve every year,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cI\u2019m more aggressive. I\u2019m more confident with my game when I come to the net.", "answer": "Nishikori", "sentence": "After his run to the final of the United States Open last year, which included a five-set win over Wawrinka in the quarterfinals, Nishikori was expected by many to move one step further at this tournament.", "paragraph_sentence": "He added: \u201cI had the wind with me, so it was not easy to make a drop shot, especially at that moment. No, it was a crazy tiebreak, but good tiebreak. Good to finish in three sets.\u201d After his run to the final of the United States Open last year, which included a five-set win over Wawrinka in the quarterfinals, Nishikori was expected by many to move one step further at this tournament. Still, he said, reaching the last eight of this tournament was a strong result. \u201cIt\u2019s not easy,\u201d he said of making a Grand Slam quarterfinal, adding: \u201cI have to keep doing this. I mean, I could be better. But you know, I think I need, kind of, this experience, playing tough all the time, playing a lot of matches.\u201d Wawrinka said he believed his play was even better than it was here last year, when he beat Djokovic and Rafael Nadal en route to his first major title. \u201cBut I think we all improve every year,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cI\u2019m more aggressive. I\u2019m more confident with my game when I come to the net.", "paragraph_answer": "He added: \u201cI had the wind with me, so it was not easy to make a drop shot, especially at that moment. No, it was a crazy tiebreak, but good tiebreak. Good to finish in three sets.\u201d After his run to the final of the United States Open last year, which included a five-set win over Wawrinka in the quarterfinals, Nishikori was expected by many to move one step further at this tournament. Still, he said, reaching the last eight of this tournament was a strong result. \u201cIt\u2019s not easy,\u201d he said of making a Grand Slam quarterfinal, adding: \u201cI have to keep doing this. I mean, I could be better. But you know, I think I need, kind of, this experience, playing tough all the time, playing a lot of matches.\u201d Wawrinka said he believed his play was even better than it was here last year, when he beat Djokovic and Rafael Nadal en route to his first major title. \u201cBut I think we all improve every year,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cI\u2019m more aggressive. I\u2019m more confident with my game when I come to the net.", "sentence_answer": "After his run to the final of the United States Open last year, which included a five-set win over Wawrinka in the quarterfinals, Nishikori was expected by many to move one step further at this tournament."} +{"question": "In what bracket did Noshikori compete with Wawrinka in last years United States Open?", "paragraph": "He added: \u201cI had the wind with me, so it was not easy to make a drop shot, especially at that moment. No, it was a crazy tiebreak, but good tiebreak. Good to finish in three sets.\u201d After his run to the final of the United States Open last year, which included a five-set win over Wawrinka in the quarterfinals, Nishikori was expected by many to move one step further at this tournament. Still, he said, reaching the last eight of this tournament was a strong result. \u201cIt\u2019s not easy,\u201d he said of making a Grand Slam quarterfinal, adding: \u201cI have to keep doing this. I mean, I could be better. But you know, I think I need, kind of, this experience, playing tough all the time, playing a lot of matches.\u201d Wawrinka said he believed his play was even better than it was here last year, when he beat Djokovic and Rafael Nadal en route to his first major title. \u201cBut I think we all improve every year,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cI\u2019m more aggressive. I\u2019m more confident with my game when I come to the net.", "answer": "quarterfinals", "sentence": "After his run to the final of the United States Open last year, which included a five-set win over Wawrinka in the quarterfinals , Nishikori was expected by many to move one step further at this tournament.", "paragraph_sentence": "He added: \u201cI had the wind with me, so it was not easy to make a drop shot, especially at that moment. No, it was a crazy tiebreak, but good tiebreak. Good to finish in three sets.\u201d After his run to the final of the United States Open last year, which included a five-set win over Wawrinka in the quarterfinals , Nishikori was expected by many to move one step further at this tournament. Still, he said, reaching the last eight of this tournament was a strong result. \u201cIt\u2019s not easy,\u201d he said of making a Grand Slam quarterfinal, adding: \u201cI have to keep doing this. I mean, I could be better. But you know, I think I need, kind of, this experience, playing tough all the time, playing a lot of matches.\u201d Wawrinka said he believed his play was even better than it was here last year, when he beat Djokovic and Rafael Nadal en route to his first major title. \u201cBut I think we all improve every year,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cI\u2019m more aggressive. I\u2019m more confident with my game when I come to the net.", "paragraph_answer": "He added: \u201cI had the wind with me, so it was not easy to make a drop shot, especially at that moment. No, it was a crazy tiebreak, but good tiebreak. Good to finish in three sets.\u201d After his run to the final of the United States Open last year, which included a five-set win over Wawrinka in the quarterfinals , Nishikori was expected by many to move one step further at this tournament. Still, he said, reaching the last eight of this tournament was a strong result. \u201cIt\u2019s not easy,\u201d he said of making a Grand Slam quarterfinal, adding: \u201cI have to keep doing this. I mean, I could be better. But you know, I think I need, kind of, this experience, playing tough all the time, playing a lot of matches.\u201d Wawrinka said he believed his play was even better than it was here last year, when he beat Djokovic and Rafael Nadal en route to his first major title. \u201cBut I think we all improve every year,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cI\u2019m more aggressive. I\u2019m more confident with my game when I come to the net.", "sentence_answer": "After his run to the final of the United States Open last year, which included a five-set win over Wawrinka in the quarterfinals , Nishikori was expected by many to move one step further at this tournament."} +{"question": "Who did Wawrinka beat last year on the way to win his first major title?", "paragraph": "He added: \u201cI had the wind with me, so it was not easy to make a drop shot, especially at that moment. No, it was a crazy tiebreak, but good tiebreak. Good to finish in three sets.\u201d After his run to the final of the United States Open last year, which included a five-set win over Wawrinka in the quarterfinals, Nishikori was expected by many to move one step further at this tournament. Still, he said, reaching the last eight of this tournament was a strong result. \u201cIt\u2019s not easy,\u201d he said of making a Grand Slam quarterfinal, adding: \u201cI have to keep doing this. I mean, I could be better. But you know, I think I need, kind of, this experience, playing tough all the time, playing a lot of matches.\u201d Wawrinka said he believed his play was even better than it was here last year, when he beat Djokovic and Rafael Nadal en route to his first major title. \u201cBut I think we all improve every year,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cI\u2019m more aggressive. I\u2019m more confident with my game when I come to the net.", "answer": "Djokovic and Rafael Nadal", "sentence": "Wawrinka said he believed his play was even better than it was here last year, when he beat Djokovic and Rafael Nadal en route to his first major title.", "paragraph_sentence": "He added: \u201cI had the wind with me, so it was not easy to make a drop shot, especially at that moment. No, it was a crazy tiebreak, but good tiebreak. Good to finish in three sets.\u201d After his run to the final of the United States Open last year, which included a five-set win over Wawrinka in the quarterfinals, Nishikori was expected by many to move one step further at this tournament. Still, he said, reaching the last eight of this tournament was a strong result. \u201cIt\u2019s not easy,\u201d he said of making a Grand Slam quarterfinal, adding: \u201cI have to keep doing this. I mean, I could be better. But you know, I think I need, kind of, this experience, playing tough all the time, playing a lot of matches.\u201d Wawrinka said he believed his play was even better than it was here last year, when he beat Djokovic and Rafael Nadal en route to his first major title. \u201cBut I think we all improve every year,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cI\u2019m more aggressive. I\u2019m more confident with my game when I come to the net.", "paragraph_answer": "He added: \u201cI had the wind with me, so it was not easy to make a drop shot, especially at that moment. No, it was a crazy tiebreak, but good tiebreak. Good to finish in three sets.\u201d After his run to the final of the United States Open last year, which included a five-set win over Wawrinka in the quarterfinals, Nishikori was expected by many to move one step further at this tournament. Still, he said, reaching the last eight of this tournament was a strong result. \u201cIt\u2019s not easy,\u201d he said of making a Grand Slam quarterfinal, adding: \u201cI have to keep doing this. I mean, I could be better. But you know, I think I need, kind of, this experience, playing tough all the time, playing a lot of matches.\u201d Wawrinka said he believed his play was even better than it was here last year, when he beat Djokovic and Rafael Nadal en route to his first major title. \u201cBut I think we all improve every year,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cI\u2019m more aggressive. I\u2019m more confident with my game when I come to the net.", "sentence_answer": "Wawrinka said he believed his play was even better than it was here last year, when he beat Djokovic and Rafael Nadal en route to his first major title."} +{"question": "How often do you play during a Grand Slam?", "paragraph": "\u201cAgain, it\u2019s a Grand Slam. You play every two days. Today was a great level, was a great match. Now I\u2019m going to enjoy a little bit, watch who\u2019s going to win tonight and get ready for the semifinal.\u201d Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne, with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10, in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year. \u201cYou know when you play Novak, especially in a semifinal in a Grand Slam, you have to play your best game,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cYou have to play your best tennis if you want to push him. So far, I\u2019m playing great. I\u2019m confident with my game. I\u2019m happy I won in three sets today. Let\u2019s see.\u201d Djokovic, who beat Wawrinka in five sets in the semifinals of the 2013 United States Open, said he was prepared for another hard-fought match. \u201cI\u2019m ready for the battle,\u201d he said, adding that their last three Grand Slam matches \u201cwere the finals stages of a Grand Slam, semifinals, quarterfinals.\u201d", "answer": "every two days", "sentence": "You play every two days .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cAgain, it\u2019s a Grand Slam. You play every two days . Today was a great level, was a great match. Now I\u2019m going to enjoy a little bit, watch who\u2019s going to win tonight and get ready for the semifinal.\u201d Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne, with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10, in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year. \u201cYou know when you play Novak, especially in a semifinal in a Grand Slam, you have to play your best game,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cYou have to play your best tennis if you want to push him. So far, I\u2019m playing great. I\u2019m confident with my game. I\u2019m happy I won in three sets today. Let\u2019s see.\u201d Djokovic, who beat Wawrinka in five sets in the semifinals of the 2013 United States Open, said he was prepared for another hard-fought match. \u201cI\u2019m ready for the battle,\u201d he said, adding that their last three Grand Slam matches \u201cwere the finals stages of a Grand Slam, semifinals, quarterfinals.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cAgain, it\u2019s a Grand Slam. You play every two days . Today was a great level, was a great match. Now I\u2019m going to enjoy a little bit, watch who\u2019s going to win tonight and get ready for the semifinal.\u201d Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne, with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10, in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year. \u201cYou know when you play Novak, especially in a semifinal in a Grand Slam, you have to play your best game,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cYou have to play your best tennis if you want to push him. So far, I\u2019m playing great. I\u2019m confident with my game. I\u2019m happy I won in three sets today. Let\u2019s see.\u201d Djokovic, who beat Wawrinka in five sets in the semifinals of the 2013 United States Open, said he was prepared for another hard-fought match. \u201cI\u2019m ready for the battle,\u201d he said, adding that their last three Grand Slam matches \u201cwere the finals stages of a Grand Slam, semifinals, quarterfinals.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "You play every two days ."} +{"question": "Where were the previous two Grand Slams held?", "paragraph": "\u201cAgain, it\u2019s a Grand Slam. You play every two days. Today was a great level, was a great match. Now I\u2019m going to enjoy a little bit, watch who\u2019s going to win tonight and get ready for the semifinal.\u201d Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne, with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10, in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year. \u201cYou know when you play Novak, especially in a semifinal in a Grand Slam, you have to play your best game,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cYou have to play your best tennis if you want to push him. So far, I\u2019m playing great. I\u2019m confident with my game. I\u2019m happy I won in three sets today. Let\u2019s see.\u201d Djokovic, who beat Wawrinka in five sets in the semifinals of the 2013 United States Open, said he was prepared for another hard-fought match. \u201cI\u2019m ready for the battle,\u201d he said, adding that their last three Grand Slam matches \u201cwere the finals stages of a Grand Slam, semifinals, quarterfinals.\u201d", "answer": "Melbourne", "sentence": "Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne , with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10, in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cAgain, it\u2019s a Grand Slam. You play every two days. Today was a great level, was a great match. Now I\u2019m going to enjoy a little bit, watch who\u2019s going to win tonight and get ready for the semifinal.\u201d Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne , with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10, in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year. \u201cYou know when you play Novak, especially in a semifinal in a Grand Slam, you have to play your best game,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cYou have to play your best tennis if you want to push him. So far, I\u2019m playing great. I\u2019m confident with my game. I\u2019m happy I won in three sets today. Let\u2019s see.\u201d Djokovic, who beat Wawrinka in five sets in the semifinals of the 2013 United States Open, said he was prepared for another hard-fought match. \u201cI\u2019m ready for the battle,\u201d he said, adding that their last three Grand Slam matches \u201cwere the finals stages of a Grand Slam, semifinals, quarterfinals.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cAgain, it\u2019s a Grand Slam. You play every two days. Today was a great level, was a great match. Now I\u2019m going to enjoy a little bit, watch who\u2019s going to win tonight and get ready for the semifinal.\u201d Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne , with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10, in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year. \u201cYou know when you play Novak, especially in a semifinal in a Grand Slam, you have to play your best game,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cYou have to play your best tennis if you want to push him. So far, I\u2019m playing great. I\u2019m confident with my game. I\u2019m happy I won in three sets today. Let\u2019s see.\u201d Djokovic, who beat Wawrinka in five sets in the semifinals of the 2013 United States Open, said he was prepared for another hard-fought match. \u201cI\u2019m ready for the battle,\u201d he said, adding that their last three Grand Slam matches \u201cwere the finals stages of a Grand Slam, semifinals, quarterfinals.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne , with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10, in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year."} +{"question": "In what year did Djokovic defeat Wawrinka during a Grand Slam?", "paragraph": "\u201cAgain, it\u2019s a Grand Slam. You play every two days. Today was a great level, was a great match. Now I\u2019m going to enjoy a little bit, watch who\u2019s going to win tonight and get ready for the semifinal.\u201d Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne, with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10, in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year. \u201cYou know when you play Novak, especially in a semifinal in a Grand Slam, you have to play your best game,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cYou have to play your best tennis if you want to push him. So far, I\u2019m playing great. I\u2019m confident with my game. I\u2019m happy I won in three sets today. Let\u2019s see.\u201d Djokovic, who beat Wawrinka in five sets in the semifinals of the 2013 United States Open, said he was prepared for another hard-fought match. \u201cI\u2019m ready for the battle,\u201d he said, adding that their last three Grand Slam matches \u201cwere the finals stages of a Grand Slam, semifinals, quarterfinals.\u201d", "answer": "2013", "sentence": "Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne, with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10, in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cAgain, it\u2019s a Grand Slam. You play every two days. Today was a great level, was a great match. Now I\u2019m going to enjoy a little bit, watch who\u2019s going to win tonight and get ready for the semifinal.\u201d Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne, with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10, in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year. \u201cYou know when you play Novak, especially in a semifinal in a Grand Slam, you have to play your best game,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cYou have to play your best tennis if you want to push him. So far, I\u2019m playing great. I\u2019m confident with my game. I\u2019m happy I won in three sets today. Let\u2019s see.\u201d Djokovic, who beat Wawrinka in five sets in the semifinals of the 2013 United States Open, said he was prepared for another hard-fought match. \u201cI\u2019m ready for the battle,\u201d he said, adding that their last three Grand Slam matches \u201cwere the finals stages of a Grand Slam, semifinals, quarterfinals.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cAgain, it\u2019s a Grand Slam. You play every two days. Today was a great level, was a great match. Now I\u2019m going to enjoy a little bit, watch who\u2019s going to win tonight and get ready for the semifinal.\u201d Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne, with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10, in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year. \u201cYou know when you play Novak, especially in a semifinal in a Grand Slam, you have to play your best game,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cYou have to play your best tennis if you want to push him. So far, I\u2019m playing great. I\u2019m confident with my game. I\u2019m happy I won in three sets today. Let\u2019s see.\u201d Djokovic, who beat Wawrinka in five sets in the semifinals of the 2013 United States Open, said he was prepared for another hard-fought match. \u201cI\u2019m ready for the battle,\u201d he said, adding that their last three Grand Slam matches \u201cwere the finals stages of a Grand Slam, semifinals, quarterfinals.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne, with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10, in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year."} +{"question": "What was the final score between Djokovic and Wawrinka during the 2013 Grand Slam?", "paragraph": "\u201cAgain, it\u2019s a Grand Slam. You play every two days. Today was a great level, was a great match. Now I\u2019m going to enjoy a little bit, watch who\u2019s going to win tonight and get ready for the semifinal.\u201d Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne, with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10, in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year. \u201cYou know when you play Novak, especially in a semifinal in a Grand Slam, you have to play your best game,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cYou have to play your best tennis if you want to push him. So far, I\u2019m playing great. I\u2019m confident with my game. I\u2019m happy I won in three sets today. Let\u2019s see.\u201d Djokovic, who beat Wawrinka in five sets in the semifinals of the 2013 United States Open, said he was prepared for another hard-fought match. \u201cI\u2019m ready for the battle,\u201d he said, adding that their last three Grand Slam matches \u201cwere the finals stages of a Grand Slam, semifinals, quarterfinals.\u201d", "answer": "12-10", "sentence": "Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne, with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10 , in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cAgain, it\u2019s a Grand Slam. You play every two days. Today was a great level, was a great match. Now I\u2019m going to enjoy a little bit, watch who\u2019s going to win tonight and get ready for the semifinal.\u201d Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne, with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10 , in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year. \u201cYou know when you play Novak, especially in a semifinal in a Grand Slam, you have to play your best game,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cYou have to play your best tennis if you want to push him. So far, I\u2019m playing great. I\u2019m confident with my game. I\u2019m happy I won in three sets today. Let\u2019s see.\u201d Djokovic, who beat Wawrinka in five sets in the semifinals of the 2013 United States Open, said he was prepared for another hard-fought match. \u201cI\u2019m ready for the battle,\u201d he said, adding that their last three Grand Slam matches \u201cwere the finals stages of a Grand Slam, semifinals, quarterfinals.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cAgain, it\u2019s a Grand Slam. You play every two days. Today was a great level, was a great match. Now I\u2019m going to enjoy a little bit, watch who\u2019s going to win tonight and get ready for the semifinal.\u201d Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne, with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10 , in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year. \u201cYou know when you play Novak, especially in a semifinal in a Grand Slam, you have to play your best game,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cYou have to play your best tennis if you want to push him. So far, I\u2019m playing great. I\u2019m confident with my game. I\u2019m happy I won in three sets today. Let\u2019s see.\u201d Djokovic, who beat Wawrinka in five sets in the semifinals of the 2013 United States Open, said he was prepared for another hard-fought match. \u201cI\u2019m ready for the battle,\u201d he said, adding that their last three Grand Slam matches \u201cwere the finals stages of a Grand Slam, semifinals, quarterfinals.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne, with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10 , in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year."} +{"question": "In what bracket of the tournament did Wawrinka defeat Djokovic last year?", "paragraph": "\u201cAgain, it\u2019s a Grand Slam. You play every two days. Today was a great level, was a great match. Now I\u2019m going to enjoy a little bit, watch who\u2019s going to win tonight and get ready for the semifinal.\u201d Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne, with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10, in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year. \u201cYou know when you play Novak, especially in a semifinal in a Grand Slam, you have to play your best game,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cYou have to play your best tennis if you want to push him. So far, I\u2019m playing great. I\u2019m confident with my game. I\u2019m happy I won in three sets today. Let\u2019s see.\u201d Djokovic, who beat Wawrinka in five sets in the semifinals of the 2013 United States Open, said he was prepared for another hard-fought match. \u201cI\u2019m ready for the battle,\u201d he said, adding that their last three Grand Slam matches \u201cwere the finals stages of a Grand Slam, semifinals, quarterfinals.\u201d", "answer": "quarterfinals", "sentence": "Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne, with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10, in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cAgain, it\u2019s a Grand Slam. You play every two days. Today was a great level, was a great match. Now I\u2019m going to enjoy a little bit, watch who\u2019s going to win tonight and get ready for the semifinal.\u201d Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne, with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10, in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year. \u201cYou know when you play Novak, especially in a semifinal in a Grand Slam, you have to play your best game,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cYou have to play your best tennis if you want to push him. So far, I\u2019m playing great. I\u2019m confident with my game. I\u2019m happy I won in three sets today. Let\u2019s see.\u201d Djokovic, who beat Wawrinka in five sets in the semifinals of the 2013 United States Open, said he was prepared for another hard-fought match. \u201cI\u2019m ready for the battle,\u201d he said, adding that their last three Grand Slam matches \u201cwere the finals stages of a Grand Slam, semifinals, quarterfinals.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cAgain, it\u2019s a Grand Slam. You play every two days. Today was a great level, was a great match. Now I\u2019m going to enjoy a little bit, watch who\u2019s going to win tonight and get ready for the semifinal.\u201d Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne, with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10, in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year. \u201cYou know when you play Novak, especially in a semifinal in a Grand Slam, you have to play your best game,\u201d Wawrinka said. \u201cYou have to play your best tennis if you want to push him. So far, I\u2019m playing great. I\u2019m confident with my game. I\u2019m happy I won in three sets today. Let\u2019s see.\u201d Djokovic, who beat Wawrinka in five sets in the semifinals of the 2013 United States Open, said he was prepared for another hard-fought match. \u201cI\u2019m ready for the battle,\u201d he said, adding that their last three Grand Slam matches \u201cwere the finals stages of a Grand Slam, semifinals, quarterfinals.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Wawrinka and Djokovic played grueling five-setters in each of the previous two years in Melbourne, with Djokovic prevailing, 12-10, in the fifth set in the fourth round in 2013 and Wawrinka avenging that loss in the quarterfinals last year."} +{"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."} +{"question": "How many states and cities had sick leave policies in 2011?", "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": "two", "sentence": "Last year, 11 states and cities did so, up from only two in 2011.", "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": "Last year, 11 states and cities did so, up from only two in 2011."} +{"question": "What is going to be passed soon by Montgomery County?", "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": "paid sick-leave policies", "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."} +{"question": "How many states banned 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": "Eleven other states", "sentence": "( Eleven other states , including Wisconsin, Arizona and Georgia, have gone the other direction, banning cities from enacting paid sick leave.)", "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": "( Eleven other states , including Wisconsin, Arizona and Georgia, have gone the other direction, banning cities from enacting paid sick leave.)"} +{"question": "Hoe many states and cities passed sick leave policies during the past year?", "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": "11 states and cities", "sentence": "Last year, 11 states and cities did so, up from only two in 2011.", "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": "Last year, 11 states and cities did so, up from only two in 2011."} +{"question": "Which three states offer paid family leave?", "paragraph": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "answer": "California, New Jersey and Rhode Island", "sentence": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees.", "paragraph_sentence": " Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "paragraph_answer": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "sentence_answer": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees."} +{"question": "Which cities started offering parental leave this year?", "paragraph": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "answer": "several cities, including Boston and Seattle", "sentence": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees.", "paragraph_sentence": " Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "paragraph_answer": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "sentence_answer": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees."} +{"question": "What does the cities feel a need for?", "paragraph": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "answer": "national standards", "sentence": "\u201cWe always knew that we need national standards , but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "paragraph_sentence": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards , but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave. ", "paragraph_answer": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards , but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe always knew that we need national standards , but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave."} +{"question": "At which level happen the workplace change first?", "paragraph": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "answer": "at the state or local level", "sentence": "\u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level ,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "paragraph_sentence": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level ,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave. ", "paragraph_answer": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level ,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level ,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave."} +{"question": "What's the role of Ellen Bravo at Family Values @ Work?", "paragraph": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "answer": "executive director", "sentence": "\u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "paragraph_sentence": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave. ", "paragraph_answer": "Three states \u2014 California, New Jersey and Rhode Island \u2014 offer paid family leave, and several cities, including Boston and Seattle this year, have begun offering parental leave to city employees. \u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe always knew that we need national standards, but historically in our country, workplace changes happen first at the state or local level,\u201d said Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values @ Work, a network of groups pushing for paid leave."} +{"question": "Who fought paid leave?", "paragraph": "Corporate America, as a whole, has long fought paid leave. Executives, especially at small businesses, say it burdens employers with additional costs and the need to temporarily replace employees. Some studies have found that when governments require paid leave, employers pay for it by decreasing employees\u2019 wages. \u201cI certainly think there\u2019s a lot of people who benefit from paid leave,\u201d said James Sherk, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative group in Washington. \u201cBut given it\u2019s not a free lunch and employees are paying for it, I\u2019d prefer it was a decision the employee was making and not being forced on them.\u201d Some small businesses are offering their own paid leave policies. Molly Moon\u2019s Homemade Ice Cream, a Seattle chain, recently began offering employees 12 weeks of paid parental leave. \u201cIt was not just the right thing to do but also a really important retention policy,\u201d said Molly Moon Neitzel, the owner. In the prelude to the 2016 election, Democrats have signaled that they see paid leave as a political winner \u2014 a broadly popular policy change that addresses economic anxiety. Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator and Democratic presidential candidate, has called for legislation to guarantee paid sick, vacation and family leave.", "answer": "Corporate America", "sentence": "Corporate America , as a whole, has long fought paid leave.", "paragraph_sentence": " Corporate America , as a whole, has long fought paid leave. Executives, especially at small businesses, say it burdens employers with additional costs and the need to temporarily replace employees. Some studies have found that when governments require paid leave, employers pay for it by decreasing employees\u2019 wages. \u201cI certainly think there\u2019s a lot of people who benefit from paid leave,\u201d said James Sherk, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative group in Washington. \u201cBut given it\u2019s not a free lunch and employees are paying for it, I\u2019d prefer it was a decision the employee was making and not being forced on them.\u201d Some small businesses are offering their own paid leave policies. Molly Moon\u2019s Homemade Ice Cream, a Seattle chain, recently began offering employees 12 weeks of paid parental leave. \u201cIt was not just the right thing to do but also a really important retention policy,\u201d said Molly Moon Neitzel, the owner. In the prelude to the 2016 election, Democrats have signaled that they see paid leave as a political winner \u2014 a broadly popular policy change that addresses economic anxiety. Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator and Democratic presidential candidate, has called for legislation to guarantee paid sick, vacation and family leave.", "paragraph_answer": " Corporate America , as a whole, has long fought paid leave. Executives, especially at small businesses, say it burdens employers with additional costs and the need to temporarily replace employees. Some studies have found that when governments require paid leave, employers pay for it by decreasing employees\u2019 wages. \u201cI certainly think there\u2019s a lot of people who benefit from paid leave,\u201d said James Sherk, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative group in Washington. \u201cBut given it\u2019s not a free lunch and employees are paying for it, I\u2019d prefer it was a decision the employee was making and not being forced on them.\u201d Some small businesses are offering their own paid leave policies. Molly Moon\u2019s Homemade Ice Cream, a Seattle chain, recently began offering employees 12 weeks of paid parental leave. \u201cIt was not just the right thing to do but also a really important retention policy,\u201d said Molly Moon Neitzel, the owner. In the prelude to the 2016 election, Democrats have signaled that they see paid leave as a political winner \u2014 a broadly popular policy change that addresses economic anxiety. Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator and Democratic presidential candidate, has called for legislation to guarantee paid sick, vacation and family leave.", "sentence_answer": " Corporate America , as a whole, has long fought paid leave."} +{"question": "What employers need to do when employees take paid leave?", "paragraph": "Corporate America, as a whole, has long fought paid leave. Executives, especially at small businesses, say it burdens employers with additional costs and the need to temporarily replace employees. Some studies have found that when governments require paid leave, employers pay for it by decreasing employees\u2019 wages. \u201cI certainly think there\u2019s a lot of people who benefit from paid leave,\u201d said James Sherk, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative group in Washington. \u201cBut given it\u2019s not a free lunch and employees are paying for it, I\u2019d prefer it was a decision the employee was making and not being forced on them.\u201d Some small businesses are offering their own paid leave policies. Molly Moon\u2019s Homemade Ice Cream, a Seattle chain, recently began offering employees 12 weeks of paid parental leave. \u201cIt was not just the right thing to do but also a really important retention policy,\u201d said Molly Moon Neitzel, the owner. In the prelude to the 2016 election, Democrats have signaled that they see paid leave as a political winner \u2014 a broadly popular policy change that addresses economic anxiety. Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator and Democratic presidential candidate, has called for legislation to guarantee paid sick, vacation and family leave.", "answer": "temporarily replace employees", "sentence": "Executives, especially at small businesses, say it burdens employers with additional costs and the need to temporarily replace employees .", "paragraph_sentence": "Corporate America, as a whole, has long fought paid leave. Executives, especially at small businesses, say it burdens employers with additional costs and the need to temporarily replace employees . Some studies have found that when governments require paid leave, employers pay for it by decreasing employees\u2019 wages. \u201cI certainly think there\u2019s a lot of people who benefit from paid leave,\u201d said James Sherk, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative group in Washington. \u201cBut given it\u2019s not a free lunch and employees are paying for it, I\u2019d prefer it was a decision the employee was making and not being forced on them.\u201d Some small businesses are offering their own paid leave policies. Molly Moon\u2019s Homemade Ice Cream, a Seattle chain, recently began offering employees 12 weeks of paid parental leave. \u201cIt was not just the right thing to do but also a really important retention policy,\u201d said Molly Moon Neitzel, the owner. In the prelude to the 2016 election, Democrats have signaled that they see paid leave as a political winner \u2014 a broadly popular policy change that addresses economic anxiety. Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator and Democratic presidential candidate, has called for legislation to guarantee paid sick, vacation and family leave.", "paragraph_answer": "Corporate America, as a whole, has long fought paid leave. Executives, especially at small businesses, say it burdens employers with additional costs and the need to temporarily replace employees . Some studies have found that when governments require paid leave, employers pay for it by decreasing employees\u2019 wages. \u201cI certainly think there\u2019s a lot of people who benefit from paid leave,\u201d said James Sherk, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative group in Washington. \u201cBut given it\u2019s not a free lunch and employees are paying for it, I\u2019d prefer it was a decision the employee was making and not being forced on them.\u201d Some small businesses are offering their own paid leave policies. Molly Moon\u2019s Homemade Ice Cream, a Seattle chain, recently began offering employees 12 weeks of paid parental leave. \u201cIt was not just the right thing to do but also a really important retention policy,\u201d said Molly Moon Neitzel, the owner. In the prelude to the 2016 election, Democrats have signaled that they see paid leave as a political winner \u2014 a broadly popular policy change that addresses economic anxiety. Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator and Democratic presidential candidate, has called for legislation to guarantee paid sick, vacation and family leave.", "sentence_answer": "Executives, especially at small businesses, say it burdens employers with additional costs and the need to temporarily replace employees ."} +{"question": "Where does work James Sherk?", "paragraph": "Corporate America, as a whole, has long fought paid leave. Executives, especially at small businesses, say it burdens employers with additional costs and the need to temporarily replace employees. Some studies have found that when governments require paid leave, employers pay for it by decreasing employees\u2019 wages. \u201cI certainly think there\u2019s a lot of people who benefit from paid leave,\u201d said James Sherk, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative group in Washington. \u201cBut given it\u2019s not a free lunch and employees are paying for it, I\u2019d prefer it was a decision the employee was making and not being forced on them.\u201d Some small businesses are offering their own paid leave policies. Molly Moon\u2019s Homemade Ice Cream, a Seattle chain, recently began offering employees 12 weeks of paid parental leave. \u201cIt was not just the right thing to do but also a really important retention policy,\u201d said Molly Moon Neitzel, the owner. In the prelude to the 2016 election, Democrats have signaled that they see paid leave as a political winner \u2014 a broadly popular policy change that addresses economic anxiety. Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator and Democratic presidential candidate, has called for legislation to guarantee paid sick, vacation and family leave.", "answer": "Heritage Foundation", "sentence": "\u201cI certainly think there\u2019s a lot of people who benefit from paid leave,\u201d said James Sherk, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation , a conservative group in Washington.", "paragraph_sentence": "Corporate America, as a whole, has long fought paid leave. Executives, especially at small businesses, say it burdens employers with additional costs and the need to temporarily replace employees. Some studies have found that when governments require paid leave, employers pay for it by decreasing employees\u2019 wages. \u201cI certainly think there\u2019s a lot of people who benefit from paid leave,\u201d said James Sherk, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation , a conservative group in Washington. \u201cBut given it\u2019s not a free lunch and employees are paying for it, I\u2019d prefer it was a decision the employee was making and not being forced on them.\u201d Some small businesses are offering their own paid leave policies. Molly Moon\u2019s Homemade Ice Cream, a Seattle chain, recently began offering employees 12 weeks of paid parental leave. \u201cIt was not just the right thing to do but also a really important retention policy,\u201d said Molly Moon Neitzel, the owner. In the prelude to the 2016 election, Democrats have signaled that they see paid leave as a political winner \u2014 a broadly popular policy change that addresses economic anxiety. Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator and Democratic presidential candidate, has called for legislation to guarantee paid sick, vacation and family leave.", "paragraph_answer": "Corporate America, as a whole, has long fought paid leave. Executives, especially at small businesses, say it burdens employers with additional costs and the need to temporarily replace employees. Some studies have found that when governments require paid leave, employers pay for it by decreasing employees\u2019 wages. \u201cI certainly think there\u2019s a lot of people who benefit from paid leave,\u201d said James Sherk, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation , a conservative group in Washington. \u201cBut given it\u2019s not a free lunch and employees are paying for it, I\u2019d prefer it was a decision the employee was making and not being forced on them.\u201d Some small businesses are offering their own paid leave policies. Molly Moon\u2019s Homemade Ice Cream, a Seattle chain, recently began offering employees 12 weeks of paid parental leave. \u201cIt was not just the right thing to do but also a really important retention policy,\u201d said Molly Moon Neitzel, the owner. In the prelude to the 2016 election, Democrats have signaled that they see paid leave as a political winner \u2014 a broadly popular policy change that addresses economic anxiety. Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator and Democratic presidential candidate, has called for legislation to guarantee paid sick, vacation and family leave.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI certainly think there\u2019s a lot of people who benefit from paid leave,\u201d said James Sherk, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation , a conservative group in Washington."} +{"question": "What is Molly Moon's offering to their employees?", "paragraph": "Corporate America, as a whole, has long fought paid leave. Executives, especially at small businesses, say it burdens employers with additional costs and the need to temporarily replace employees. Some studies have found that when governments require paid leave, employers pay for it by decreasing employees\u2019 wages. \u201cI certainly think there\u2019s a lot of people who benefit from paid leave,\u201d said James Sherk, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative group in Washington. \u201cBut given it\u2019s not a free lunch and employees are paying for it, I\u2019d prefer it was a decision the employee was making and not being forced on them.\u201d Some small businesses are offering their own paid leave policies. Molly Moon\u2019s Homemade Ice Cream, a Seattle chain, recently began offering employees 12 weeks of paid parental leave. \u201cIt was not just the right thing to do but also a really important retention policy,\u201d said Molly Moon Neitzel, the owner. In the prelude to the 2016 election, Democrats have signaled that they see paid leave as a political winner \u2014 a broadly popular policy change that addresses economic anxiety. Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator and Democratic presidential candidate, has called for legislation to guarantee paid sick, vacation and family leave.", "answer": "12 weeks of paid parental leave", "sentence": "Molly Moon\u2019s Homemade Ice Cream, a Seattle chain, recently began offering employees 12 weeks of paid parental leave .", "paragraph_sentence": "Corporate America, as a whole, has long fought paid leave. Executives, especially at small businesses, say it burdens employers with additional costs and the need to temporarily replace employees. Some studies have found that when governments require paid leave, employers pay for it by decreasing employees\u2019 wages. \u201cI certainly think there\u2019s a lot of people who benefit from paid leave,\u201d said James Sherk, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative group in Washington. \u201cBut given it\u2019s not a free lunch and employees are paying for it, I\u2019d prefer it was a decision the employee was making and not being forced on them.\u201d Some small businesses are offering their own paid leave policies. Molly Moon\u2019s Homemade Ice Cream, a Seattle chain, recently began offering employees 12 weeks of paid parental leave . \u201cIt was not just the right thing to do but also a really important retention policy,\u201d said Molly Moon Neitzel, the owner. In the prelude to the 2016 election, Democrats have signaled that they see paid leave as a political winner \u2014 a broadly popular policy change that addresses economic anxiety. Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator and Democratic presidential candidate, has called for legislation to guarantee paid sick, vacation and family leave.", "paragraph_answer": "Corporate America, as a whole, has long fought paid leave. Executives, especially at small businesses, say it burdens employers with additional costs and the need to temporarily replace employees. Some studies have found that when governments require paid leave, employers pay for it by decreasing employees\u2019 wages. \u201cI certainly think there\u2019s a lot of people who benefit from paid leave,\u201d said James Sherk, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative group in Washington. \u201cBut given it\u2019s not a free lunch and employees are paying for it, I\u2019d prefer it was a decision the employee was making and not being forced on them.\u201d Some small businesses are offering their own paid leave policies. Molly Moon\u2019s Homemade Ice Cream, a Seattle chain, recently began offering employees 12 weeks of paid parental leave . \u201cIt was not just the right thing to do but also a really important retention policy,\u201d said Molly Moon Neitzel, the owner. In the prelude to the 2016 election, Democrats have signaled that they see paid leave as a political winner \u2014 a broadly popular policy change that addresses economic anxiety. Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator and Democratic presidential candidate, has called for legislation to guarantee paid sick, vacation and family leave.", "sentence_answer": "Molly Moon\u2019s Homemade Ice Cream, a Seattle chain, recently began offering employees 12 weeks of paid parental leave ."} +{"question": "Who is the Vermont senator?", "paragraph": "Corporate America, as a whole, has long fought paid leave. Executives, especially at small businesses, say it burdens employers with additional costs and the need to temporarily replace employees. Some studies have found that when governments require paid leave, employers pay for it by decreasing employees\u2019 wages. \u201cI certainly think there\u2019s a lot of people who benefit from paid leave,\u201d said James Sherk, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative group in Washington. \u201cBut given it\u2019s not a free lunch and employees are paying for it, I\u2019d prefer it was a decision the employee was making and not being forced on them.\u201d Some small businesses are offering their own paid leave policies. Molly Moon\u2019s Homemade Ice Cream, a Seattle chain, recently began offering employees 12 weeks of paid parental leave. \u201cIt was not just the right thing to do but also a really important retention policy,\u201d said Molly Moon Neitzel, the owner. In the prelude to the 2016 election, Democrats have signaled that they see paid leave as a political winner \u2014 a broadly popular policy change that addresses economic anxiety. Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator and Democratic presidential candidate, has called for legislation to guarantee paid sick, vacation and family leave.", "answer": "Bernie Sanders", "sentence": "Bernie Sanders , the Vermont senator and Democratic presidential candidate, has called for legislation to guarantee paid sick, vacation and family leave.", "paragraph_sentence": "Corporate America, as a whole, has long fought paid leave. Executives, especially at small businesses, say it burdens employers with additional costs and the need to temporarily replace employees. Some studies have found that when governments require paid leave, employers pay for it by decreasing employees\u2019 wages. \u201cI certainly think there\u2019s a lot of people who benefit from paid leave,\u201d said James Sherk, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative group in Washington. \u201cBut given it\u2019s not a free lunch and employees are paying for it, I\u2019d prefer it was a decision the employee was making and not being forced on them.\u201d Some small businesses are offering their own paid leave policies. Molly Moon\u2019s Homemade Ice Cream, a Seattle chain, recently began offering employees 12 weeks of paid parental leave. \u201cIt was not just the right thing to do but also a really important retention policy,\u201d said Molly Moon Neitzel, the owner. In the prelude to the 2016 election, Democrats have signaled that they see paid leave as a political winner \u2014 a broadly popular policy change that addresses economic anxiety. Bernie Sanders , the Vermont senator and Democratic presidential candidate, has called for legislation to guarantee paid sick, vacation and family leave. ", "paragraph_answer": "Corporate America, as a whole, has long fought paid leave. Executives, especially at small businesses, say it burdens employers with additional costs and the need to temporarily replace employees. Some studies have found that when governments require paid leave, employers pay for it by decreasing employees\u2019 wages. \u201cI certainly think there\u2019s a lot of people who benefit from paid leave,\u201d said James Sherk, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative group in Washington. \u201cBut given it\u2019s not a free lunch and employees are paying for it, I\u2019d prefer it was a decision the employee was making and not being forced on them.\u201d Some small businesses are offering their own paid leave policies. Molly Moon\u2019s Homemade Ice Cream, a Seattle chain, recently began offering employees 12 weeks of paid parental leave. \u201cIt was not just the right thing to do but also a really important retention policy,\u201d said Molly Moon Neitzel, the owner. In the prelude to the 2016 election, Democrats have signaled that they see paid leave as a political winner \u2014 a broadly popular policy change that addresses economic anxiety. Bernie Sanders , the Vermont senator and Democratic presidential candidate, has called for legislation to guarantee paid sick, vacation and family leave.", "sentence_answer": " Bernie Sanders , the Vermont senator and Democratic presidential candidate, has called for legislation to guarantee paid sick, vacation and family leave."} +{"question": "What is Ms. Andino?", "paragraph": "Ms. Andino, a medical assistant, guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned. \u201cMaybe later we\u2019ll try playing Monopoly,\u201d she said. \u201cIt eats up a lot of time.\u201d In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions. \u201cWe braved the weather yesterday,\u201d he said, describing an outing to Kidville, a children\u2019s gym and play station, with his daughter, Tallulah, 3. \u201cToday, \u2018Frozen\u2019 will probably handle it,\u201d he said, citing the sisters who are the film\u2019s heroines. \u201cAnna and Elsa all day.\u201d But Tallulah and her mother, Melle Powers, an actress and teacher, had a better idea: taking an imaginary trip back to the Caribbean resort where they vacationed last week, making pretend sand castles on their small living room floor.", "answer": "a medical assistant", "sentence": "Ms. Andino, a medical assistant , guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Andino, a medical assistant , guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned. \u201cMaybe later we\u2019ll try playing Monopoly,\u201d she said. \u201cIt eats up a lot of time.\u201d In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions. \u201cWe braved the weather yesterday,\u201d he said, describing an outing to Kidville, a children\u2019s gym and play station, with his daughter, Tallulah, 3. \u201cToday, \u2018Frozen\u2019 will probably handle it,\u201d he said, citing the sisters who are the film\u2019s heroines. \u201cAnna and Elsa all day.\u201d But Tallulah and her mother, Melle Powers, an actress and teacher, had a better idea: taking an imaginary trip back to the Caribbean resort where they vacationed last week, making pretend sand castles on their small living room floor.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Andino, a medical assistant , guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned. \u201cMaybe later we\u2019ll try playing Monopoly,\u201d she said. \u201cIt eats up a lot of time.\u201d In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions. \u201cWe braved the weather yesterday,\u201d he said, describing an outing to Kidville, a children\u2019s gym and play station, with his daughter, Tallulah, 3. \u201cToday, \u2018Frozen\u2019 will probably handle it,\u201d he said, citing the sisters who are the film\u2019s heroines. \u201cAnna and Elsa all day.\u201d But Tallulah and her mother, Melle Powers, an actress and teacher, had a better idea: taking an imaginary trip back to the Caribbean resort where they vacationed last week, making pretend sand castles on their small living room floor.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Andino, a medical assistant , guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned."} +{"question": "What came sooner than Ms. Andino expected?", "paragraph": "Ms. Andino, a medical assistant, guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned. \u201cMaybe later we\u2019ll try playing Monopoly,\u201d she said. \u201cIt eats up a lot of time.\u201d In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions. \u201cWe braved the weather yesterday,\u201d he said, describing an outing to Kidville, a children\u2019s gym and play station, with his daughter, Tallulah, 3. \u201cToday, \u2018Frozen\u2019 will probably handle it,\u201d he said, citing the sisters who are the film\u2019s heroines. \u201cAnna and Elsa all day.\u201d But Tallulah and her mother, Melle Powers, an actress and teacher, had a better idea: taking an imaginary trip back to the Caribbean resort where they vacationed last week, making pretend sand castles on their small living room floor.", "answer": "video games", "sentence": "Ms. Andino, a medical assistant, guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Andino, a medical assistant, guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned. \u201cMaybe later we\u2019ll try playing Monopoly,\u201d she said. \u201cIt eats up a lot of time.\u201d In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions. \u201cWe braved the weather yesterday,\u201d he said, describing an outing to Kidville, a children\u2019s gym and play station, with his daughter, Tallulah, 3. \u201cToday, \u2018Frozen\u2019 will probably handle it,\u201d he said, citing the sisters who are the film\u2019s heroines. \u201cAnna and Elsa all day.\u201d But Tallulah and her mother, Melle Powers, an actress and teacher, had a better idea: taking an imaginary trip back to the Caribbean resort where they vacationed last week, making pretend sand castles on their small living room floor.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Andino, a medical assistant, guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned. \u201cMaybe later we\u2019ll try playing Monopoly,\u201d she said. \u201cIt eats up a lot of time.\u201d In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions. \u201cWe braved the weather yesterday,\u201d he said, describing an outing to Kidville, a children\u2019s gym and play station, with his daughter, Tallulah, 3. \u201cToday, \u2018Frozen\u2019 will probably handle it,\u201d he said, citing the sisters who are the film\u2019s heroines. \u201cAnna and Elsa all day.\u201d But Tallulah and her mother, Melle Powers, an actress and teacher, had a better idea: taking an imaginary trip back to the Caribbean resort where they vacationed last week, making pretend sand castles on their small living room floor.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Andino, a medical assistant, guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned."} +{"question": "Who are the two heroines of the film 'Frozen'?", "paragraph": "Ms. Andino, a medical assistant, guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned. \u201cMaybe later we\u2019ll try playing Monopoly,\u201d she said. \u201cIt eats up a lot of time.\u201d In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions. \u201cWe braved the weather yesterday,\u201d he said, describing an outing to Kidville, a children\u2019s gym and play station, with his daughter, Tallulah, 3. \u201cToday, \u2018Frozen\u2019 will probably handle it,\u201d he said, citing the sisters who are the film\u2019s heroines. \u201cAnna and Elsa all day.\u201d But Tallulah and her mother, Melle Powers, an actress and teacher, had a better idea: taking an imaginary trip back to the Caribbean resort where they vacationed last week, making pretend sand castles on their small living room floor.", "answer": "Anna and Elsa", "sentence": "\u201c Anna and Elsa all day.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Andino, a medical assistant, guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned. \u201cMaybe later we\u2019ll try playing Monopoly,\u201d she said. \u201cIt eats up a lot of time.\u201d In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions. \u201cWe braved the weather yesterday,\u201d he said, describing an outing to Kidville, a children\u2019s gym and play station, with his daughter, Tallulah, 3. \u201cToday, \u2018Frozen\u2019 will probably handle it,\u201d he said, citing the sisters who are the film\u2019s heroines. \u201c Anna and Elsa all day.\u201d But Tallulah and her mother, Melle Powers, an actress and teacher, had a better idea: taking an imaginary trip back to the Caribbean resort where they vacationed last week, making pretend sand castles on their small living room floor.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Andino, a medical assistant, guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned. \u201cMaybe later we\u2019ll try playing Monopoly,\u201d she said. \u201cIt eats up a lot of time.\u201d In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions. \u201cWe braved the weather yesterday,\u201d he said, describing an outing to Kidville, a children\u2019s gym and play station, with his daughter, Tallulah, 3. \u201cToday, \u2018Frozen\u2019 will probably handle it,\u201d he said, citing the sisters who are the film\u2019s heroines. \u201c Anna and Elsa all day.\u201d But Tallulah and her mother, Melle Powers, an actress and teacher, had a better idea: taking an imaginary trip back to the Caribbean resort where they vacationed last week, making pretend sand castles on their small living room floor.", "sentence_answer": "\u201c Anna and Elsa all day.\u201d"} +{"question": "Who went to Kidville?", "paragraph": "Ms. Andino, a medical assistant, guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned. \u201cMaybe later we\u2019ll try playing Monopoly,\u201d she said. \u201cIt eats up a lot of time.\u201d In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions. \u201cWe braved the weather yesterday,\u201d he said, describing an outing to Kidville, a children\u2019s gym and play station, with his daughter, Tallulah, 3. \u201cToday, \u2018Frozen\u2019 will probably handle it,\u201d he said, citing the sisters who are the film\u2019s heroines. \u201cAnna and Elsa all day.\u201d But Tallulah and her mother, Melle Powers, an actress and teacher, had a better idea: taking an imaginary trip back to the Caribbean resort where they vacationed last week, making pretend sand castles on their small living room floor.", "answer": "Jeremy Brisiel", "sentence": "In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Andino, a medical assistant, guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned. \u201cMaybe later we\u2019ll try playing Monopoly,\u201d she said. \u201cIt eats up a lot of time.\u201d In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions. \u201cWe braved the weather yesterday,\u201d he said, describing an outing to Kidville, a children\u2019s gym and play station, with his daughter, Tallulah, 3. \u201cToday, \u2018Frozen\u2019 will probably handle it,\u201d he said, citing the sisters who are the film\u2019s heroines. \u201cAnna and Elsa all day.\u201d But Tallulah and her mother, Melle Powers, an actress and teacher, had a better idea: taking an imaginary trip back to the Caribbean resort where they vacationed last week, making pretend sand castles on their small living room floor.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Andino, a medical assistant, guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned. \u201cMaybe later we\u2019ll try playing Monopoly,\u201d she said. \u201cIt eats up a lot of time.\u201d In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions. \u201cWe braved the weather yesterday,\u201d he said, describing an outing to Kidville, a children\u2019s gym and play station, with his daughter, Tallulah, 3. \u201cToday, \u2018Frozen\u2019 will probably handle it,\u201d he said, citing the sisters who are the film\u2019s heroines. \u201cAnna and Elsa all day.\u201d But Tallulah and her mother, Melle Powers, an actress and teacher, had a better idea: taking an imaginary trip back to the Caribbean resort where they vacationed last week, making pretend sand castles on their small living room floor.", "sentence_answer": "In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions."} +{"question": "Who is Tallulah's mother?", "paragraph": "Ms. Andino, a medical assistant, guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned. \u201cMaybe later we\u2019ll try playing Monopoly,\u201d she said. \u201cIt eats up a lot of time.\u201d In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions. \u201cWe braved the weather yesterday,\u201d he said, describing an outing to Kidville, a children\u2019s gym and play station, with his daughter, Tallulah, 3. \u201cToday, \u2018Frozen\u2019 will probably handle it,\u201d he said, citing the sisters who are the film\u2019s heroines. \u201cAnna and Elsa all day.\u201d But Tallulah and her mother, Melle Powers, an actress and teacher, had a better idea: taking an imaginary trip back to the Caribbean resort where they vacationed last week, making pretend sand castles on their small living room floor.", "answer": "Melle Powers", "sentence": "But Tallulah and her mother, Melle Powers , an actress and teacher, had a better idea: taking an imaginary trip back to the Caribbean resort where they vacationed last week, making pretend sand castles on their small living room floor.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Andino, a medical assistant, guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned. \u201cMaybe later we\u2019ll try playing Monopoly,\u201d she said. \u201cIt eats up a lot of time.\u201d In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions. \u201cWe braved the weather yesterday,\u201d he said, describing an outing to Kidville, a children\u2019s gym and play station, with his daughter, Tallulah, 3. \u201cToday, \u2018Frozen\u2019 will probably handle it,\u201d he said, citing the sisters who are the film\u2019s heroines. \u201cAnna and Elsa all day.\u201d But Tallulah and her mother, Melle Powers , an actress and teacher, had a better idea: taking an imaginary trip back to the Caribbean resort where they vacationed last week, making pretend sand castles on their small living room floor. ", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Andino, a medical assistant, guessed that the video games might come sooner than she had planned. \u201cMaybe later we\u2019ll try playing Monopoly,\u201d she said. \u201cIt eats up a lot of time.\u201d In Midtown Manhattan, Jeremy Brisiel began the morning with no illusions. \u201cWe braved the weather yesterday,\u201d he said, describing an outing to Kidville, a children\u2019s gym and play station, with his daughter, Tallulah, 3. \u201cToday, \u2018Frozen\u2019 will probably handle it,\u201d he said, citing the sisters who are the film\u2019s heroines. \u201cAnna and Elsa all day.\u201d But Tallulah and her mother, Melle Powers , an actress and teacher, had a better idea: taking an imaginary trip back to the Caribbean resort where they vacationed last week, making pretend sand castles on their small living room floor.", "sentence_answer": "But Tallulah and her mother, Melle Powers , an actress and teacher, had a better idea: taking an imaginary trip back to the Caribbean resort where they vacationed last week, making pretend sand castles on their small living room floor."} +{"question": "How old is Maher Bawady?", "paragraph": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43, of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight, he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "answer": "43", "sentence": "Maher Bawady, 43 , of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan.", "paragraph_sentence": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43 , of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight, he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "paragraph_answer": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43 , of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight, he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "sentence_answer": "Maher Bawady, 43 , of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan."} +{"question": "What did Maher have to hold near a heater?", "paragraph": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43, of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight, he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "answer": "each latex glove", "sentence": "He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand.", "paragraph_sentence": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43, of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight, he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "paragraph_answer": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43, of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight, he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "sentence_answer": "He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand."} +{"question": "What was the temperature at 7:29 am?", "paragraph": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43, of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight, he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "answer": "3 degrees", "sentence": "At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service.", "paragraph_sentence": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43, of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight, he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "paragraph_answer": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43, of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight, he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "sentence_answer": "At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service."} +{"question": "What was the record temperature in January 2004?", "paragraph": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43, of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight, he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "answer": "1 degree", "sentence": "At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service.", "paragraph_sentence": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43, of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight, he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "paragraph_answer": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43, of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight, he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "sentence_answer": "At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service."} +{"question": "More snow is expected when?", "paragraph": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43, of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight, he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "answer": "after midnight", "sentence": "More snow is expected after midnight , he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "paragraph_sentence": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43, of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight , he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning. ", "paragraph_answer": "For some New Yorkers, the subzero wind chill was the occupational hazard of making a living outdoors. Maher Bawady, 43, of Queens, woke at 2:30 a.m. on Monday to set up his food cart outside 500 Park Avenue in Manhattan. By 6:30 a.m., he had had two cups of coffee and was nursing a hot tea on what looked like his worst day on the street in more than 14 years as a vendor. He had to hold each latex glove by a heater so it would stretch over his hand. At 7:29 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of 3 degrees in Central Park, the lowest since the record of 1 degree was set in January 2004, said Tim Morrin, the observation program leader for the National Weather Service. As Mr. Morrin explained the meteorological reasons for the cold spell, he evoked a vast snow-covered landscape swept by arctic winds and a jet stream that had shifted south of the metropolitan region in January, opening the door to the coldest blasts in a decade. More snow is expected after midnight , he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning.", "sentence_answer": "More snow is expected after midnight , he said, enough to affect the commute on Tuesday morning."} +{"question": "How old is Andrew Albany?", "paragraph": "\u201cSometimes when you have a wholesale shift in the weather pattern it can persist for quite a while,\u201d he said. \u201cAs we get to the end of this week, we\u2019re going to see temperatures as cold or even colder.\u201d Meteorologists and their families are not immune to the consequences. Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen. Putting the 1-year-old in the playpen, and the 3-year-old and 6-year-old in front of a Disney movie, he deployed a space heater to try to try to thaw the pipe, before heading to his 3 p.m. to midnight shift as a nurse. The children\u2019s movie? Yes, he conceded, laughing, \u201cIt was \u2018Frozen.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "28", "sentence": "Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28 , was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cSometimes when you have a wholesale shift in the weather pattern it can persist for quite a while,\u201d he said. \u201cAs we get to the end of this week, we\u2019re going to see temperatures as cold or even colder.\u201d Meteorologists and their families are not immune to the consequences. Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28 , was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen. Putting the 1-year-old in the playpen, and the 3-year-old and 6-year-old in front of a Disney movie, he deployed a space heater to try to try to thaw the pipe, before heading to his 3 p.m. to midnight shift as a nurse. The children\u2019s movie? Yes, he conceded, laughing, \u201cIt was \u2018Frozen.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cSometimes when you have a wholesale shift in the weather pattern it can persist for quite a while,\u201d he said. \u201cAs we get to the end of this week, we\u2019re going to see temperatures as cold or even colder.\u201d Meteorologists and their families are not immune to the consequences. Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28 , was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen. Putting the 1-year-old in the playpen, and the 3-year-old and 6-year-old in front of a Disney movie, he deployed a space heater to try to try to thaw the pipe, before heading to his 3 p.m. to midnight shift as a nurse. The children\u2019s movie? Yes, he conceded, laughing, \u201cIt was \u2018Frozen.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28 , was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen."} +{"question": "How many children does Andrew have?", "paragraph": "\u201cSometimes when you have a wholesale shift in the weather pattern it can persist for quite a while,\u201d he said. \u201cAs we get to the end of this week, we\u2019re going to see temperatures as cold or even colder.\u201d Meteorologists and their families are not immune to the consequences. Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen. Putting the 1-year-old in the playpen, and the 3-year-old and 6-year-old in front of a Disney movie, he deployed a space heater to try to try to thaw the pipe, before heading to his 3 p.m. to midnight shift as a nurse. The children\u2019s movie? Yes, he conceded, laughing, \u201cIt was \u2018Frozen.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "three children", "sentence": "Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cSometimes when you have a wholesale shift in the weather pattern it can persist for quite a while,\u201d he said. \u201cAs we get to the end of this week, we\u2019re going to see temperatures as cold or even colder.\u201d Meteorologists and their families are not immune to the consequences. Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen. Putting the 1-year-old in the playpen, and the 3-year-old and 6-year-old in front of a Disney movie, he deployed a space heater to try to try to thaw the pipe, before heading to his 3 p.m. to midnight shift as a nurse. The children\u2019s movie? Yes, he conceded, laughing, \u201cIt was \u2018Frozen.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cSometimes when you have a wholesale shift in the weather pattern it can persist for quite a while,\u201d he said. \u201cAs we get to the end of this week, we\u2019re going to see temperatures as cold or even colder.\u201d Meteorologists and their families are not immune to the consequences. Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen. Putting the 1-year-old in the playpen, and the 3-year-old and 6-year-old in front of a Disney movie, he deployed a space heater to try to try to thaw the pipe, before heading to his 3 p.m. to midnight shift as a nurse. The children\u2019s movie? Yes, he conceded, laughing, \u201cIt was \u2018Frozen.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen."} +{"question": "What happened to Andrew's washer pipe?", "paragraph": "\u201cSometimes when you have a wholesale shift in the weather pattern it can persist for quite a while,\u201d he said. \u201cAs we get to the end of this week, we\u2019re going to see temperatures as cold or even colder.\u201d Meteorologists and their families are not immune to the consequences. Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen. Putting the 1-year-old in the playpen, and the 3-year-old and 6-year-old in front of a Disney movie, he deployed a space heater to try to try to thaw the pipe, before heading to his 3 p.m. to midnight shift as a nurse. The children\u2019s movie? Yes, he conceded, laughing, \u201cIt was \u2018Frozen.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "the pipe to the washer was frozen", "sentence": "Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cSometimes when you have a wholesale shift in the weather pattern it can persist for quite a while,\u201d he said. \u201cAs we get to the end of this week, we\u2019re going to see temperatures as cold or even colder.\u201d Meteorologists and their families are not immune to the consequences. Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen . Putting the 1-year-old in the playpen, and the 3-year-old and 6-year-old in front of a Disney movie, he deployed a space heater to try to try to thaw the pipe, before heading to his 3 p.m. to midnight shift as a nurse. The children\u2019s movie? Yes, he conceded, laughing, \u201cIt was \u2018Frozen.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cSometimes when you have a wholesale shift in the weather pattern it can persist for quite a while,\u201d he said. \u201cAs we get to the end of this week, we\u2019re going to see temperatures as cold or even colder.\u201d Meteorologists and their families are not immune to the consequences. Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen . Putting the 1-year-old in the playpen, and the 3-year-old and 6-year-old in front of a Disney movie, he deployed a space heater to try to try to thaw the pipe, before heading to his 3 p.m. to midnight shift as a nurse. The children\u2019s movie? Yes, he conceded, laughing, \u201cIt was \u2018Frozen.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen ."} +{"question": "Where did Andrew put his 1-year-old?", "paragraph": "\u201cSometimes when you have a wholesale shift in the weather pattern it can persist for quite a while,\u201d he said. \u201cAs we get to the end of this week, we\u2019re going to see temperatures as cold or even colder.\u201d Meteorologists and their families are not immune to the consequences. Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen. Putting the 1-year-old in the playpen, and the 3-year-old and 6-year-old in front of a Disney movie, he deployed a space heater to try to try to thaw the pipe, before heading to his 3 p.m. to midnight shift as a nurse. The children\u2019s movie? Yes, he conceded, laughing, \u201cIt was \u2018Frozen.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "playpen", "sentence": "Putting the 1-year-old in the playpen , and the 3-year-old and 6-year-old in front of a Disney movie, he deployed a space heater to try to try to thaw the pipe, before heading to his 3 p.m. to midnight shift as a nurse.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cSometimes when you have a wholesale shift in the weather pattern it can persist for quite a while,\u201d he said. \u201cAs we get to the end of this week, we\u2019re going to see temperatures as cold or even colder.\u201d Meteorologists and their families are not immune to the consequences. Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen. Putting the 1-year-old in the playpen , and the 3-year-old and 6-year-old in front of a Disney movie, he deployed a space heater to try to try to thaw the pipe, before heading to his 3 p.m. to midnight shift as a nurse. The children\u2019s movie? Yes, he conceded, laughing, \u201cIt was \u2018Frozen.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cSometimes when you have a wholesale shift in the weather pattern it can persist for quite a while,\u201d he said. \u201cAs we get to the end of this week, we\u2019re going to see temperatures as cold or even colder.\u201d Meteorologists and their families are not immune to the consequences. Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen. Putting the 1-year-old in the playpen , and the 3-year-old and 6-year-old in front of a Disney movie, he deployed a space heater to try to try to thaw the pipe, before heading to his 3 p.m. to midnight shift as a nurse. The children\u2019s movie? Yes, he conceded, laughing, \u201cIt was \u2018Frozen.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "Putting the 1-year-old in the playpen , and the 3-year-old and 6-year-old in front of a Disney movie, he deployed a space heater to try to try to thaw the pipe, before heading to his 3 p.m. to midnight shift as a nurse."} +{"question": "What movie were the children watching?", "paragraph": "\u201cSometimes when you have a wholesale shift in the weather pattern it can persist for quite a while,\u201d he said. \u201cAs we get to the end of this week, we\u2019re going to see temperatures as cold or even colder.\u201d Meteorologists and their families are not immune to the consequences. Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen. Putting the 1-year-old in the playpen, and the 3-year-old and 6-year-old in front of a Disney movie, he deployed a space heater to try to try to thaw the pipe, before heading to his 3 p.m. to midnight shift as a nurse. The children\u2019s movie? Yes, he conceded, laughing, \u201cIt was \u2018Frozen.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "Frozen", "sentence": "Yes, he conceded, laughing, \u201cIt was \u2018 Frozen .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cSometimes when you have a wholesale shift in the weather pattern it can persist for quite a while,\u201d he said. \u201cAs we get to the end of this week, we\u2019re going to see temperatures as cold or even colder.\u201d Meteorologists and their families are not immune to the consequences. Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen. Putting the 1-year-old in the playpen, and the 3-year-old and 6-year-old in front of a Disney movie, he deployed a space heater to try to try to thaw the pipe, before heading to his 3 p.m. to midnight shift as a nurse. The children\u2019s movie? Yes, he conceded, laughing, \u201cIt was \u2018 Frozen . \u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cSometimes when you have a wholesale shift in the weather pattern it can persist for quite a while,\u201d he said. \u201cAs we get to the end of this week, we\u2019re going to see temperatures as cold or even colder.\u201d Meteorologists and their families are not immune to the consequences. Mr. Morrin\u2019s son-in-law, Andrew Albany, 28, was home with three children on Monday morning in south central New Jersey, putting in a load of laundry, when he realized the pipe to the washer was frozen. Putting the 1-year-old in the playpen, and the 3-year-old and 6-year-old in front of a Disney movie, he deployed a space heater to try to try to thaw the pipe, before heading to his 3 p.m. to midnight shift as a nurse. The children\u2019s movie? Yes, he conceded, laughing, \u201cIt was \u2018 Frozen .\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "Yes, he conceded, laughing, \u201cIt was \u2018 Frozen ."} +{"question": "What other person did Cruz speak harshly about?", "paragraph": "Cruz then grabbed the ball, skewering Clinton more sharply and showing that he could out-eloquent Rubio and out-nasty anyone. Has a young politician ever managed to be so impressive and so repulsive all at once? That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago. During a debate back then, Perry said he wanted to eliminate three federal departments or agencies and could name only two. Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice.", "answer": "Clinton", "sentence": "Cruz then grabbed the ball, skewering Clinton more sharply and showing that he could out-eloquent Rubio and out-nasty anyone.", "paragraph_sentence": " Cruz then grabbed the ball, skewering Clinton more sharply and showing that he could out-eloquent Rubio and out-nasty anyone. Has a young politician ever managed to be so impressive and so repulsive all at once? That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago. During a debate back then, Perry said he wanted to eliminate three federal departments or agencies and could name only two. Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice.", "paragraph_answer": "Cruz then grabbed the ball, skewering Clinton more sharply and showing that he could out-eloquent Rubio and out-nasty anyone. Has a young politician ever managed to be so impressive and so repulsive all at once? That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago. During a debate back then, Perry said he wanted to eliminate three federal departments or agencies and could name only two. Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice.", "sentence_answer": "Cruz then grabbed the ball, skewering Clinton more sharply and showing that he could out-eloquent Rubio and out-nasty anyone."} +{"question": "What department did Cruz accidentally mention twice?", "paragraph": "Cruz then grabbed the ball, skewering Clinton more sharply and showing that he could out-eloquent Rubio and out-nasty anyone. Has a young politician ever managed to be so impressive and so repulsive all at once? That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago. During a debate back then, Perry said he wanted to eliminate three federal departments or agencies and could name only two. Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice.", "answer": "Commerce Department", "sentence": "Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice.", "paragraph_sentence": "Cruz then grabbed the ball, skewering Clinton more sharply and showing that he could out-eloquent Rubio and out-nasty anyone. Has a young politician ever managed to be so impressive and so repulsive all at once? That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago. During a debate back then, Perry said he wanted to eliminate three federal departments or agencies and could name only two. Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice. ", "paragraph_answer": "Cruz then grabbed the ball, skewering Clinton more sharply and showing that he could out-eloquent Rubio and out-nasty anyone. Has a young politician ever managed to be so impressive and so repulsive all at once? That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago. During a debate back then, Perry said he wanted to eliminate three federal departments or agencies and could name only two. Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice.", "sentence_answer": "Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice."} +{"question": "Who else made a similar mistake to the one that Cruz made?", "paragraph": "Cruz then grabbed the ball, skewering Clinton more sharply and showing that he could out-eloquent Rubio and out-nasty anyone. Has a young politician ever managed to be so impressive and so repulsive all at once? That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago. During a debate back then, Perry said he wanted to eliminate three federal departments or agencies and could name only two. Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice.", "answer": "Rick Perry", "sentence": "That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago.", "paragraph_sentence": "Cruz then grabbed the ball, skewering Clinton more sharply and showing that he could out-eloquent Rubio and out-nasty anyone. Has a young politician ever managed to be so impressive and so repulsive all at once? That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago. During a debate back then, Perry said he wanted to eliminate three federal departments or agencies and could name only two. Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice.", "paragraph_answer": "Cruz then grabbed the ball, skewering Clinton more sharply and showing that he could out-eloquent Rubio and out-nasty anyone. Has a young politician ever managed to be so impressive and so repulsive all at once? That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago. During a debate back then, Perry said he wanted to eliminate three federal departments or agencies and could name only two. Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice.", "sentence_answer": "That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago."} +{"question": "How long ago was the last debate?", "paragraph": "Cruz then grabbed the ball, skewering Clinton more sharply and showing that he could out-eloquent Rubio and out-nasty anyone. Has a young politician ever managed to be so impressive and so repulsive all at once? That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago. During a debate back then, Perry said he wanted to eliminate three federal departments or agencies and could name only two. Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice.", "answer": "four years", "sentence": "That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago.", "paragraph_sentence": "Cruz then grabbed the ball, skewering Clinton more sharply and showing that he could out-eloquent Rubio and out-nasty anyone. Has a young politician ever managed to be so impressive and so repulsive all at once? That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago. During a debate back then, Perry said he wanted to eliminate three federal departments or agencies and could name only two. Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice.", "paragraph_answer": "Cruz then grabbed the ball, skewering Clinton more sharply and showing that he could out-eloquent Rubio and out-nasty anyone. Has a young politician ever managed to be so impressive and so repulsive all at once? That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago. During a debate back then, Perry said he wanted to eliminate three federal departments or agencies and could name only two. Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice.", "sentence_answer": "That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago."} +{"question": "How many departments did Cruz mention in total?", "paragraph": "Cruz then grabbed the ball, skewering Clinton more sharply and showing that he could out-eloquent Rubio and out-nasty anyone. Has a young politician ever managed to be so impressive and so repulsive all at once? That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago. During a debate back then, Perry said he wanted to eliminate three federal departments or agencies and could name only two. Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice.", "answer": "five", "sentence": "Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice.", "paragraph_sentence": "Cruz then grabbed the ball, skewering Clinton more sharply and showing that he could out-eloquent Rubio and out-nasty anyone. Has a young politician ever managed to be so impressive and so repulsive all at once? That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago. During a debate back then, Perry said he wanted to eliminate three federal departments or agencies and could name only two. Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice. ", "paragraph_answer": "Cruz then grabbed the ball, skewering Clinton more sharply and showing that he could out-eloquent Rubio and out-nasty anyone. Has a young politician ever managed to be so impressive and so repulsive all at once? That\u2019s the fascination of Cruz, and the most fun Tuesday night was his stumble on the very ground that tripped up Rick Perry four years ago. During a debate back then, Perry said he wanted to eliminate three federal departments or agencies and could name only two. Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice.", "sentence_answer": "Cruz said he wanted to eliminate five and named the Commerce Department twice."} +{"question": "How many candidates were there originally?", "paragraph": "The stage was strangely denuded, like a forest after overzealous logging. There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker. Even so, Bush couldn\u2019t and didn\u2019t stand out the way he, more than anyone else, really needed to. He can take some solace though, in the No. 1 questions about two rivals that were trending on Google. \u201cWho is Rand Paul?\u201d was one. And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz?\u201d", "answer": "11", "sentence": "There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker.", "paragraph_sentence": "The stage was strangely denuded, like a forest after overzealous logging. There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker. Even so, Bush couldn\u2019t and didn\u2019t stand out the way he, more than anyone else, really needed to. He can take some solace though, in the No. 1 questions about two rivals that were trending on Google. \u201cWho is Rand Paul?\u201d was one. And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz?\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The stage was strangely denuded, like a forest after overzealous logging. There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker. Even so, Bush couldn\u2019t and didn\u2019t stand out the way he, more than anyone else, really needed to. He can take some solace though, in the No. 1 questions about two rivals that were trending on Google. \u201cWho is Rand Paul?\u201d was one. And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz?\u201d", "sentence_answer": "There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker."} +{"question": "How many candidates were there after some dropped out?", "paragraph": "The stage was strangely denuded, like a forest after overzealous logging. There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker. Even so, Bush couldn\u2019t and didn\u2019t stand out the way he, more than anyone else, really needed to. He can take some solace though, in the No. 1 questions about two rivals that were trending on Google. \u201cWho is Rand Paul?\u201d was one. And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz?\u201d", "answer": "eight", "sentence": "There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker.", "paragraph_sentence": "The stage was strangely denuded, like a forest after overzealous logging. There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker. Even so, Bush couldn\u2019t and didn\u2019t stand out the way he, more than anyone else, really needed to. He can take some solace though, in the No. 1 questions about two rivals that were trending on Google. \u201cWho is Rand Paul?\u201d was one. And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz?\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The stage was strangely denuded, like a forest after overzealous logging. There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker. Even so, Bush couldn\u2019t and didn\u2019t stand out the way he, more than anyone else, really needed to. He can take some solace though, in the No. 1 questions about two rivals that were trending on Google. \u201cWho is Rand Paul?\u201d was one. And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz?\u201d", "sentence_answer": "There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker."} +{"question": "Who was Googled a lot because people were surprised he was not more popular?", "paragraph": "The stage was strangely denuded, like a forest after overzealous logging. There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker. Even so, Bush couldn\u2019t and didn\u2019t stand out the way he, more than anyone else, really needed to. He can take some solace though, in the No. 1 questions about two rivals that were trending on Google. \u201cWho is Rand Paul?\u201d was one. And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz?\u201d", "answer": "Ted Cruz", "sentence": "And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz ?\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "The stage was strangely denuded, like a forest after overzealous logging. There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker. Even so, Bush couldn\u2019t and didn\u2019t stand out the way he, more than anyone else, really needed to. He can take some solace though, in the No. 1 questions about two rivals that were trending on Google. \u201cWho is Rand Paul?\u201d was one. And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz ?\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "The stage was strangely denuded, like a forest after overzealous logging. There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker. Even so, Bush couldn\u2019t and didn\u2019t stand out the way he, more than anyone else, really needed to. He can take some solace though, in the No. 1 questions about two rivals that were trending on Google. \u201cWho is Rand Paul?\u201d was one. And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz ?\u201d", "sentence_answer": "And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz ?\u201d"} +{"question": "Who was Googled a lot because people didn't know who he was?", "paragraph": "The stage was strangely denuded, like a forest after overzealous logging. There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker. Even so, Bush couldn\u2019t and didn\u2019t stand out the way he, more than anyone else, really needed to. He can take some solace though, in the No. 1 questions about two rivals that were trending on Google. \u201cWho is Rand Paul?\u201d was one. And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz?\u201d", "answer": "Rand Paul", "sentence": "\u201cWho is Rand Paul ?\u201d was one.", "paragraph_sentence": "The stage was strangely denuded, like a forest after overzealous logging. There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker. Even so, Bush couldn\u2019t and didn\u2019t stand out the way he, more than anyone else, really needed to. He can take some solace though, in the No. 1 questions about two rivals that were trending on Google. \u201cWho is Rand Paul ?\u201d was one. And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz?\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The stage was strangely denuded, like a forest after overzealous logging. There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker. Even so, Bush couldn\u2019t and didn\u2019t stand out the way he, more than anyone else, really needed to. He can take some solace though, in the No. 1 questions about two rivals that were trending on Google. \u201cWho is Rand Paul ?\u201d was one. And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz?\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWho is Rand Paul ?\u201d was one."} +{"question": "Candidates included Walker, Paul, Cruz, and whom else?", "paragraph": "The stage was strangely denuded, like a forest after overzealous logging. There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker. Even so, Bush couldn\u2019t and didn\u2019t stand out the way he, more than anyone else, really needed to. He can take some solace though, in the No. 1 questions about two rivals that were trending on Google. \u201cWho is Rand Paul?\u201d was one. And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz?\u201d", "answer": "Bush", "sentence": "Even so, Bush couldn\u2019t and didn\u2019t stand out the way he, more than anyone else, really needed to.", "paragraph_sentence": "The stage was strangely denuded, like a forest after overzealous logging. There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker. Even so, Bush couldn\u2019t and didn\u2019t stand out the way he, more than anyone else, really needed to. He can take some solace though, in the No. 1 questions about two rivals that were trending on Google. \u201cWho is Rand Paul?\u201d was one. And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz?\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The stage was strangely denuded, like a forest after overzealous logging. There were eight contenders where there had once been 11 \u2014 back in the glory days of Scott Walker. Even so, Bush couldn\u2019t and didn\u2019t stand out the way he, more than anyone else, really needed to. He can take some solace though, in the No. 1 questions about two rivals that were trending on Google. \u201cWho is Rand Paul?\u201d was one. And the other, my favorite: \u201cWhy do Republicans hate Ted Cruz?\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Even so, Bush couldn\u2019t and didn\u2019t stand out the way he, more than anyone else, really needed to."} +{"question": "How many decades did Lorraine Leong live in the North Slope?", "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": "six decades", "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."} +{"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."} +{"question": "How much did Lorraine pay for a condominium in 2012?", "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": "$693,000", "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."} +{"question": "What is Lorraine's son described as, to help keep her informed about new restaurants?", "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": "\u201cfoodie\u201d", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "What ethnic descent is Ms. Leong of?", "paragraph": "Nevertheless, even as parts of Park Slope are increasingly buffed to a high polish, the area still offers a variety of experience. After living much of the last six decades in the North Slope townhouse her seamstress mother had bought in 1949, Lorraine Leong, a health care administrator, decamped to the southwestern fringe of the neighborhood in 2012, paying $693,000 for a two-bedroom condominium on 12th Street and Fourth Avenue, a thoroughfare where blocky residential buildings have sprung up since a 2003 rezoning. Her son, a \u201cfoodie\u201d who lives upstairs, keeps her informed, she said, about \u201call the great restaurants opening up\u201d on Fifth Avenue and Flatbush Avenue. \u201cFourth and Fifth Avenues have that diverse mix that Brooklyn always had, and it\u2019s very appealing to me,\u201d said Ms. Leong, who is of Chinese descent. \u201cThere are Italians and Latinos still around, and a guy on my corner sells tacos from a little stand for a dollar. You don\u2019t want to lose that.\u201d", "answer": "Chinese", "sentence": "\u201cFourth and Fifth Avenues have that diverse mix that Brooklyn always had, and it\u2019s very appealing to me,\u201d said Ms. Leong, who is of Chinese descent.", "paragraph_sentence": "Nevertheless, even as parts of Park Slope are increasingly buffed to a high polish, the area still offers a variety of experience. After living much of the last six decades in the North Slope townhouse her seamstress mother had bought in 1949, Lorraine Leong, a health care administrator, decamped to the southwestern fringe of the neighborhood in 2012, paying $693,000 for a two-bedroom condominium on 12th Street and Fourth Avenue, a thoroughfare where blocky residential buildings have sprung up since a 2003 rezoning. Her son, a \u201cfoodie\u201d who lives upstairs, keeps her informed, she said, about \u201call the great restaurants opening up\u201d on Fifth Avenue and Flatbush Avenue. \u201cFourth and Fifth Avenues have that diverse mix that Brooklyn always had, and it\u2019s very appealing to me,\u201d said Ms. Leong, who is of Chinese descent. \u201cThere are Italians and Latinos still around, and a guy on my corner sells tacos from a little stand for a dollar. You don\u2019t want to lose that.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Nevertheless, even as parts of Park Slope are increasingly buffed to a high polish, the area still offers a variety of experience. After living much of the last six decades in the North Slope townhouse her seamstress mother had bought in 1949, Lorraine Leong, a health care administrator, decamped to the southwestern fringe of the neighborhood in 2012, paying $693,000 for a two-bedroom condominium on 12th Street and Fourth Avenue, a thoroughfare where blocky residential buildings have sprung up since a 2003 rezoning. Her son, a \u201cfoodie\u201d who lives upstairs, keeps her informed, she said, about \u201call the great restaurants opening up\u201d on Fifth Avenue and Flatbush Avenue. \u201cFourth and Fifth Avenues have that diverse mix that Brooklyn always had, and it\u2019s very appealing to me,\u201d said Ms. Leong, who is of Chinese descent. \u201cThere are Italians and Latinos still around, and a guy on my corner sells tacos from a little stand for a dollar. You don\u2019t want to lose that.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cFourth and Fifth Avenues have that diverse mix that Brooklyn always had, and it\u2019s very appealing to me,\u201d said Ms. Leong, who is of Chinese descent."} +{"question": "Which two individuals designed Prospect Park?", "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": "Calvert Vaux and Frederick Law Olmsted", "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 .", "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": "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 ."} +{"question": "What sort of mansion was built for Bon Ami?", "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": "neo-Jacobean", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"question": "About how many residents live in Park Slope?", "paragraph": "A principal draw of Park Slope has always been the rolling meadows and sinuous paths of Prospect Park, a masterpiece designed by Calvert Vaux and Frederick Law Olmsted. The neighborhood, home to about 60,000, stretches west from the park to the rumbling river of traffic known as Fourth Avenue, and south from Flatbush Avenue. There is no unanimity on the southern boundary. Many longtime residents define it as 15th Street; others say the vicinity of the Prospect Expressway. Spurred in part by the opening of the Brooklyn Bridge in 1883, a Gold Coast of ornate townhouses and mansions arose around Plaza Street and Prospect Park West. Some of these were later replaced by fine prewar apartment houses, but others survive. On Prospect Park West, a Romanesque Revival limestone mansion houses the Poly Prep Lower School; next door, a neo-Jacobean mansion built for a Bon Ami cleansing powder magnate is now home to the Brooklyn Society for Ethical Culture. At 105 Eighth Avenue, the neoclassical Tracy Mansion, which served for years as a Montessori school, is on the market for $13 million.", "answer": "60,000", "sentence": "The neighborhood, home to about 60,000 , stretches west from the park to the rumbling river of traffic known as Fourth Avenue, and south from Flatbush Avenue.", "paragraph_sentence": "A principal draw of Park Slope has always been the rolling meadows and sinuous paths of Prospect Park, a masterpiece designed by Calvert Vaux and Frederick Law Olmsted. The neighborhood, home to about 60,000 , stretches west from the park to the rumbling river of traffic known as Fourth Avenue, and south from Flatbush Avenue. There is no unanimity on the southern boundary. Many longtime residents define it as 15th Street; others say the vicinity of the Prospect Expressway. Spurred in part by the opening of the Brooklyn Bridge in 1883, a Gold Coast of ornate townhouses and mansions arose around Plaza Street and Prospect Park West. Some of these were later replaced by fine prewar apartment houses, but others survive. On Prospect Park West, a Romanesque Revival limestone mansion houses the Poly Prep Lower School; next door, a neo-Jacobean mansion built for a Bon Ami cleansing powder magnate is now home to the Brooklyn Society for Ethical Culture. At 105 Eighth Avenue, the neoclassical Tracy Mansion, which served for years as a Montessori school, is on the market for $13 million.", "paragraph_answer": "A principal draw of Park Slope has always been the rolling meadows and sinuous paths of Prospect Park, a masterpiece designed by Calvert Vaux and Frederick Law Olmsted. The neighborhood, home to about 60,000 , stretches west from the park to the rumbling river of traffic known as Fourth Avenue, and south from Flatbush Avenue. There is no unanimity on the southern boundary. Many longtime residents define it as 15th Street; others say the vicinity of the Prospect Expressway. Spurred in part by the opening of the Brooklyn Bridge in 1883, a Gold Coast of ornate townhouses and mansions arose around Plaza Street and Prospect Park West. Some of these were later replaced by fine prewar apartment houses, but others survive. On Prospect Park West, a Romanesque Revival limestone mansion houses the Poly Prep Lower School; next door, a neo-Jacobean mansion built for a Bon Ami cleansing powder magnate is now home to the Brooklyn Society for Ethical Culture. At 105 Eighth Avenue, the neoclassical Tracy Mansion, which served for years as a Montessori school, is on the market for $13 million.", "sentence_answer": "The neighborhood, home to about 60,000 , stretches west from the park to the rumbling river of traffic known as Fourth Avenue, and south from Flatbush Avenue."} +{"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."} +{"question": "How much is the Tracy Mansion being sold for?", "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": "$13 million", "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 ."} +{"question": "Which elementary school is a major attraction on Seventh Avenue?", "paragraph": "Public School 321, a well-regarded elementary school on Seventh Avenue, is a major attraction. Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide. The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place. The Commute", "answer": "Public School 321", "sentence": "Public School 321 , a well-regarded elementary school on Seventh Avenue, is a major attraction.", "paragraph_sentence": " Public School 321 , a well-regarded elementary school on Seventh Avenue, is a major attraction. Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide. The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place. The Commute", "paragraph_answer": " Public School 321 , a well-regarded elementary school on Seventh Avenue, is a major attraction. Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide. The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place. The Commute", "sentence_answer": " Public School 321 , a well-regarded elementary school on Seventh Avenue, is a major attraction."} +{"question": "What subject did 321's students meet 80 percent in state standards?", "paragraph": "Public School 321, a well-regarded elementary school on Seventh Avenue, is a major attraction. Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide. The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place. The Commute", "answer": "math", "sentence": "Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide.", "paragraph_sentence": "Public School 321, a well-regarded elementary school on Seventh Avenue, is a major attraction. Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide. The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place. The Commute", "paragraph_answer": "Public School 321, a well-regarded elementary school on Seventh Avenue, is a major attraction. Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide. The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place. The Commute", "sentence_answer": "Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide."} +{"question": "What percentage of 321's students met the state standards for the English test?", "paragraph": "Public School 321, a well-regarded elementary school on Seventh Avenue, is a major attraction. Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide. The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place. The Commute", "answer": "78", "sentence": "Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide.", "paragraph_sentence": "Public School 321, a well-regarded elementary school on Seventh Avenue, is a major attraction. Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide. The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place. The Commute", "paragraph_answer": "Public School 321, a well-regarded elementary school on Seventh Avenue, is a major attraction. Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide. The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place. The Commute", "sentence_answer": "Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide."} +{"question": "What is the highest grade the Berkeley Carroll School teach?", "paragraph": "Public School 321, a well-regarded elementary school on Seventh Avenue, is a major attraction. Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide. The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place. The Commute", "answer": "12th", "sentence": "The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place.", "paragraph_sentence": "Public School 321, a well-regarded elementary school on Seventh Avenue, is a major attraction. Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide. The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place. The Commute", "paragraph_answer": "Public School 321, a well-regarded elementary school on Seventh Avenue, is a major attraction. Last year, 78 percent of students met state standards on the state English test, and 80 percent on the math test, versus 30 and 39 percent citywide. The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place. The Commute", "sentence_answer": "The Berkeley Carroll School, a private institution for prekindergarten through 12th grade, has its lower school on Carroll Street and middle and high schools on Lincoln Place."} +{"question": "How many trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center?", "paragraph": "The North Slope is well served by subway lines, including the 2, 3, B and Q, which make stops on Flatbush and reach Midtown Manhattan in about a half-hour. Nine trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center, including the D, N, 4 and 5. The R train serves stations along Fourth Avenue. Center and South Slope residents can catch the F and G on Fourth Avenue, Seventh Avenue and 15th Street-Prospect Park. The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus, a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century. A reconstruction of the house stands in the park today.", "answer": "Nine", "sentence": "Nine trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center, including the D, N, 4 and 5.", "paragraph_sentence": "The North Slope is well served by subway lines, including the 2, 3, B and Q, which make stops on Flatbush and reach Midtown Manhattan in about a half-hour. Nine trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center, including the D, N, 4 and 5. The R train serves stations along Fourth Avenue. Center and South Slope residents can catch the F and G on Fourth Avenue, Seventh Avenue and 15th Street-Prospect Park. The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus, a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century. A reconstruction of the house stands in the park today.", "paragraph_answer": "The North Slope is well served by subway lines, including the 2, 3, B and Q, which make stops on Flatbush and reach Midtown Manhattan in about a half-hour. Nine trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center, including the D, N, 4 and 5. The R train serves stations along Fourth Avenue. Center and South Slope residents can catch the F and G on Fourth Avenue, Seventh Avenue and 15th Street-Prospect Park. The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus, a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century. A reconstruction of the house stands in the park today.", "sentence_answer": " Nine trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center, including the D, N, 4 and 5."} +{"question": "Which lines make stops on Flatbush and can reach Midtown Manhattan in half an hour.", "paragraph": "The North Slope is well served by subway lines, including the 2, 3, B and Q, which make stops on Flatbush and reach Midtown Manhattan in about a half-hour. Nine trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center, including the D, N, 4 and 5. The R train serves stations along Fourth Avenue. Center and South Slope residents can catch the F and G on Fourth Avenue, Seventh Avenue and 15th Street-Prospect Park. The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus, a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century. A reconstruction of the house stands in the park today.", "answer": "2, 3, B and Q", "sentence": "The North Slope is well served by subway lines, including the 2, 3, B and Q , which make stops on Flatbush and reach Midtown Manhattan in about a half-hour.", "paragraph_sentence": " The North Slope is well served by subway lines, including the 2, 3, B and Q , which make stops on Flatbush and reach Midtown Manhattan in about a half-hour. Nine trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center, including the D, N, 4 and 5. The R train serves stations along Fourth Avenue. Center and South Slope residents can catch the F and G on Fourth Avenue, Seventh Avenue and 15th Street-Prospect Park. The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus, a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century. A reconstruction of the house stands in the park today.", "paragraph_answer": "The North Slope is well served by subway lines, including the 2, 3, B and Q , which make stops on Flatbush and reach Midtown Manhattan in about a half-hour. Nine trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center, including the D, N, 4 and 5. The R train serves stations along Fourth Avenue. Center and South Slope residents can catch the F and G on Fourth Avenue, Seventh Avenue and 15th Street-Prospect Park. The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus, a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century. A reconstruction of the house stands in the park today.", "sentence_answer": "The North Slope is well served by subway lines, including the 2, 3, B and Q , which make stops on Flatbush and reach Midtown Manhattan in about a half-hour."} +{"question": "A forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers called which park as their home?", "paragraph": "The North Slope is well served by subway lines, including the 2, 3, B and Q, which make stops on Flatbush and reach Midtown Manhattan in about a half-hour. Nine trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center, including the D, N, 4 and 5. The R train serves stations along Fourth Avenue. Center and South Slope residents can catch the F and G on Fourth Avenue, Seventh Avenue and 15th Street-Prospect Park. The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus, a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century. A reconstruction of the house stands in the park today.", "answer": "History Washington Park", "sentence": "The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus, a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century.", "paragraph_sentence": "The North Slope is well served by subway lines, including the 2, 3, B and Q, which make stops on Flatbush and reach Midtown Manhattan in about a half-hour. Nine trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center, including the D, N, 4 and 5. The R train serves stations along Fourth Avenue. Center and South Slope residents can catch the F and G on Fourth Avenue, Seventh Avenue and 15th Street-Prospect Park. The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus, a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century. A reconstruction of the house stands in the park today.", "paragraph_answer": "The North Slope is well served by subway lines, including the 2, 3, B and Q, which make stops on Flatbush and reach Midtown Manhattan in about a half-hour. Nine trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center, including the D, N, 4 and 5. The R train serves stations along Fourth Avenue. Center and South Slope residents can catch the F and G on Fourth Avenue, Seventh Avenue and 15th Street-Prospect Park. The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus, a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century. A reconstruction of the house stands in the park today.", "sentence_answer": "The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus, a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century."} +{"question": "Which structure was used as a clubhouse by the Brooklyn Dodgers in the 19th century?", "paragraph": "The North Slope is well served by subway lines, including the 2, 3, B and Q, which make stops on Flatbush and reach Midtown Manhattan in about a half-hour. Nine trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center, including the D, N, 4 and 5. The R train serves stations along Fourth Avenue. Center and South Slope residents can catch the F and G on Fourth Avenue, Seventh Avenue and 15th Street-Prospect Park. The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus, a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century. A reconstruction of the house stands in the park today.", "answer": "Old Stone House of Gowanus", "sentence": "The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus , a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century.", "paragraph_sentence": "The North Slope is well served by subway lines, including the 2, 3, B and Q, which make stops on Flatbush and reach Midtown Manhattan in about a half-hour. Nine trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center, including the D, N, 4 and 5. The R train serves stations along Fourth Avenue. Center and South Slope residents can catch the F and G on Fourth Avenue, Seventh Avenue and 15th Street-Prospect Park. The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus , a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century. A reconstruction of the house stands in the park today.", "paragraph_answer": "The North Slope is well served by subway lines, including the 2, 3, B and Q, which make stops on Flatbush and reach Midtown Manhattan in about a half-hour. Nine trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center, including the D, N, 4 and 5. The R train serves stations along Fourth Avenue. Center and South Slope residents can catch the F and G on Fourth Avenue, Seventh Avenue and 15th Street-Prospect Park. The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus , a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century. A reconstruction of the house stands in the park today.", "sentence_answer": "The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus , a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century."} +{"question": "Which train serves stations on Fourth Avenue?", "paragraph": "The North Slope is well served by subway lines, including the 2, 3, B and Q, which make stops on Flatbush and reach Midtown Manhattan in about a half-hour. Nine trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center, including the D, N, 4 and 5. The R train serves stations along Fourth Avenue. Center and South Slope residents can catch the F and G on Fourth Avenue, Seventh Avenue and 15th Street-Prospect Park. The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus, a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century. A reconstruction of the house stands in the park today.", "answer": "R", "sentence": "The R train serves stations along Fourth Avenue.", "paragraph_sentence": "The North Slope is well served by subway lines, including the 2, 3, B and Q, which make stops on Flatbush and reach Midtown Manhattan in about a half-hour. Nine trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center, including the D, N, 4 and 5. The R train serves stations along Fourth Avenue. Center and South Slope residents can catch the F and G on Fourth Avenue, Seventh Avenue and 15th Street-Prospect Park. The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus, a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century. A reconstruction of the house stands in the park today.", "paragraph_answer": "The North Slope is well served by subway lines, including the 2, 3, B and Q, which make stops on Flatbush and reach Midtown Manhattan in about a half-hour. Nine trains stop at Atlantic Avenue - Barclays Center, including the D, N, 4 and 5. The R train serves stations along Fourth Avenue. Center and South Slope residents can catch the F and G on Fourth Avenue, Seventh Avenue and 15th Street-Prospect Park. The History Washington Park was home to a forerunner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, which used the Old Stone House of Gowanus, a 17th-century structure, as their clubhouse in the late 19th century. A reconstruction of the house stands in the park today.", "sentence_answer": "The R train serves stations along Fourth Avenue."} +{"question": "Who wrote \"Counterrevolutionary Russia?\"", "paragraph": "Re \u201cCounterrevolutionary Russia\u201d (June 26) by Roger Cohen: There have been two alternative social, political and intellectual currents with deep roots in Russia. The neo-Slavophile current exerted significant influence in the past and is re-emerging as a strong political orientation in Vladimir Putin\u2019s Russia, as Mr. Cohen notes with alarm. This illiberal ideology emphasizes the uniqueness of the \u201cRussian World\u201d with its Eastern Orthodox faith, and is providing Russian foreign policy with a renewed regional assertiveness as an Orthodox power that will protect its perceived core: Russia, Belarus and Ukraine. Seen in that light, the intervention in Ukraine is not only to further strategic interests, but also Russian moral values and sense of honor.", "answer": "Roger Cohen", "sentence": "Re \u201cCounterrevolutionary Russia\u201d (June 26) by Roger Cohen : There have been two alternative social, political and intellectual currents with deep roots in Russia.", "paragraph_sentence": " Re \u201cCounterrevolutionary Russia\u201d (June 26) by Roger Cohen : There have been two alternative social, political and intellectual currents with deep roots in Russia. The neo-Slavophile current exerted significant influence in the past and is re-emerging as a strong political orientation in Vladimir Putin\u2019s Russia, as Mr. Cohen notes with alarm. This illiberal ideology emphasizes the uniqueness of the \u201cRussian World\u201d with its Eastern Orthodox faith, and is providing Russian foreign policy with a renewed regional assertiveness as an Orthodox power that will protect its perceived core: Russia, Belarus and Ukraine. Seen in that light, the intervention in Ukraine is not only to further strategic interests, but also Russian moral values and sense of honor.", "paragraph_answer": "Re \u201cCounterrevolutionary Russia\u201d (June 26) by Roger Cohen : There have been two alternative social, political and intellectual currents with deep roots in Russia. The neo-Slavophile current exerted significant influence in the past and is re-emerging as a strong political orientation in Vladimir Putin\u2019s Russia, as Mr. Cohen notes with alarm. This illiberal ideology emphasizes the uniqueness of the \u201cRussian World\u201d with its Eastern Orthodox faith, and is providing Russian foreign policy with a renewed regional assertiveness as an Orthodox power that will protect its perceived core: Russia, Belarus and Ukraine. Seen in that light, the intervention in Ukraine is not only to further strategic interests, but also Russian moral values and sense of honor.", "sentence_answer": "Re \u201cCounterrevolutionary Russia\u201d (June 26) by Roger Cohen : There have been two alternative social, political and intellectual currents with deep roots in Russia."} +{"question": "Which ideology emphasizes the uniquess of the \"Russian World?\"", "paragraph": "Re \u201cCounterrevolutionary Russia\u201d (June 26) by Roger Cohen: There have been two alternative social, political and intellectual currents with deep roots in Russia. The neo-Slavophile current exerted significant influence in the past and is re-emerging as a strong political orientation in Vladimir Putin\u2019s Russia, as Mr. Cohen notes with alarm. This illiberal ideology emphasizes the uniqueness of the \u201cRussian World\u201d with its Eastern Orthodox faith, and is providing Russian foreign policy with a renewed regional assertiveness as an Orthodox power that will protect its perceived core: Russia, Belarus and Ukraine. Seen in that light, the intervention in Ukraine is not only to further strategic interests, but also Russian moral values and sense of honor.", "answer": "The neo-Slavophile current", "sentence": "The neo-Slavophile current exerted significant influence in the past and is re-emerging as a strong political orientation in Vladimir Putin\u2019s Russia, as Mr. Cohen notes with alarm.", "paragraph_sentence": "Re \u201cCounterrevolutionary Russia\u201d (June 26) by Roger Cohen: There have been two alternative social, political and intellectual currents with deep roots in Russia. The neo-Slavophile current exerted significant influence in the past and is re-emerging as a strong political orientation in Vladimir Putin\u2019s Russia, as Mr. Cohen notes with alarm. This illiberal ideology emphasizes the uniqueness of the \u201cRussian World\u201d with its Eastern Orthodox faith, and is providing Russian foreign policy with a renewed regional assertiveness as an Orthodox power that will protect its perceived core: Russia, Belarus and Ukraine. Seen in that light, the intervention in Ukraine is not only to further strategic interests, but also Russian moral values and sense of honor.", "paragraph_answer": "Re \u201cCounterrevolutionary Russia\u201d (June 26) by Roger Cohen: There have been two alternative social, political and intellectual currents with deep roots in Russia. The neo-Slavophile current exerted significant influence in the past and is re-emerging as a strong political orientation in Vladimir Putin\u2019s Russia, as Mr. Cohen notes with alarm. This illiberal ideology emphasizes the uniqueness of the \u201cRussian World\u201d with its Eastern Orthodox faith, and is providing Russian foreign policy with a renewed regional assertiveness as an Orthodox power that will protect its perceived core: Russia, Belarus and Ukraine. Seen in that light, the intervention in Ukraine is not only to further strategic interests, but also Russian moral values and sense of honor.", "sentence_answer": " The neo-Slavophile current exerted significant influence in the past and is re-emerging as a strong political orientation in Vladimir Putin\u2019s Russia, as Mr. Cohen notes with alarm."} +{"question": "When did Roger Cohen write \"Counterrevolutionary Russia?\"", "paragraph": "Re \u201cCounterrevolutionary Russia\u201d (June 26) by Roger Cohen: There have been two alternative social, political and intellectual currents with deep roots in Russia. The neo-Slavophile current exerted significant influence in the past and is re-emerging as a strong political orientation in Vladimir Putin\u2019s Russia, as Mr. Cohen notes with alarm. This illiberal ideology emphasizes the uniqueness of the \u201cRussian World\u201d with its Eastern Orthodox faith, and is providing Russian foreign policy with a renewed regional assertiveness as an Orthodox power that will protect its perceived core: Russia, Belarus and Ukraine. Seen in that light, the intervention in Ukraine is not only to further strategic interests, but also Russian moral values and sense of honor.", "answer": "June 26", "sentence": "Re \u201cCounterrevolutionary Russia\u201d ( June 26 ) by Roger Cohen: There have been two alternative social, political and intellectual currents with deep roots in Russia.", "paragraph_sentence": " Re \u201cCounterrevolutionary Russia\u201d ( June 26 ) by Roger Cohen: There have been two alternative social, political and intellectual currents with deep roots in Russia. The neo-Slavophile current exerted significant influence in the past and is re-emerging as a strong political orientation in Vladimir Putin\u2019s Russia, as Mr. Cohen notes with alarm. This illiberal ideology emphasizes the uniqueness of the \u201cRussian World\u201d with its Eastern Orthodox faith, and is providing Russian foreign policy with a renewed regional assertiveness as an Orthodox power that will protect its perceived core: Russia, Belarus and Ukraine. Seen in that light, the intervention in Ukraine is not only to further strategic interests, but also Russian moral values and sense of honor.", "paragraph_answer": "Re \u201cCounterrevolutionary Russia\u201d ( June 26 ) by Roger Cohen: There have been two alternative social, political and intellectual currents with deep roots in Russia. The neo-Slavophile current exerted significant influence in the past and is re-emerging as a strong political orientation in Vladimir Putin\u2019s Russia, as Mr. Cohen notes with alarm. This illiberal ideology emphasizes the uniqueness of the \u201cRussian World\u201d with its Eastern Orthodox faith, and is providing Russian foreign policy with a renewed regional assertiveness as an Orthodox power that will protect its perceived core: Russia, Belarus and Ukraine. Seen in that light, the intervention in Ukraine is not only to further strategic interests, but also Russian moral values and sense of honor.", "sentence_answer": "Re \u201cCounterrevolutionary Russia\u201d ( June 26 ) by Roger Cohen: There have been two alternative social, political and intellectual currents with deep roots in Russia."} +{"question": "Where did Russia intervene to further their strategic interests?", "paragraph": "Re \u201cCounterrevolutionary Russia\u201d (June 26) by Roger Cohen: There have been two alternative social, political and intellectual currents with deep roots in Russia. The neo-Slavophile current exerted significant influence in the past and is re-emerging as a strong political orientation in Vladimir Putin\u2019s Russia, as Mr. Cohen notes with alarm. This illiberal ideology emphasizes the uniqueness of the \u201cRussian World\u201d with its Eastern Orthodox faith, and is providing Russian foreign policy with a renewed regional assertiveness as an Orthodox power that will protect its perceived core: Russia, Belarus and Ukraine. Seen in that light, the intervention in Ukraine is not only to further strategic interests, but also Russian moral values and sense of honor.", "answer": "Ukraine", "sentence": "This illiberal ideology emphasizes the uniqueness of the \u201cRussian World\u201d with its Eastern Orthodox faith, and is providing Russian foreign policy with a renewed regional assertiveness as an Orthodox power that will protect its perceived core: Russia, Belarus and Ukraine .", "paragraph_sentence": "Re \u201cCounterrevolutionary Russia\u201d (June 26) by Roger Cohen: There have been two alternative social, political and intellectual currents with deep roots in Russia. The neo-Slavophile current exerted significant influence in the past and is re-emerging as a strong political orientation in Vladimir Putin\u2019s Russia, as Mr. Cohen notes with alarm. This illiberal ideology emphasizes the uniqueness of the \u201cRussian World\u201d with its Eastern Orthodox faith, and is providing Russian foreign policy with a renewed regional assertiveness as an Orthodox power that will protect its perceived core: Russia, Belarus and Ukraine . Seen in that light, the intervention in Ukraine is not only to further strategic interests, but also Russian moral values and sense of honor.", "paragraph_answer": "Re \u201cCounterrevolutionary Russia\u201d (June 26) by Roger Cohen: There have been two alternative social, political and intellectual currents with deep roots in Russia. The neo-Slavophile current exerted significant influence in the past and is re-emerging as a strong political orientation in Vladimir Putin\u2019s Russia, as Mr. Cohen notes with alarm. This illiberal ideology emphasizes the uniqueness of the \u201cRussian World\u201d with its Eastern Orthodox faith, and is providing Russian foreign policy with a renewed regional assertiveness as an Orthodox power that will protect its perceived core: Russia, Belarus and Ukraine . Seen in that light, the intervention in Ukraine is not only to further strategic interests, but also Russian moral values and sense of honor.", "sentence_answer": "This illiberal ideology emphasizes the uniqueness of the \u201cRussian World\u201d with its Eastern Orthodox faith, and is providing Russian foreign policy with a renewed regional assertiveness as an Orthodox power that will protect its perceived core: Russia, Belarus and Ukraine ."} +{"question": "Which faith is associated with the Russian World?", "paragraph": "Re \u201cCounterrevolutionary Russia\u201d (June 26) by Roger Cohen: There have been two alternative social, political and intellectual currents with deep roots in Russia. The neo-Slavophile current exerted significant influence in the past and is re-emerging as a strong political orientation in Vladimir Putin\u2019s Russia, as Mr. Cohen notes with alarm. This illiberal ideology emphasizes the uniqueness of the \u201cRussian World\u201d with its Eastern Orthodox faith, and is providing Russian foreign policy with a renewed regional assertiveness as an Orthodox power that will protect its perceived core: Russia, Belarus and Ukraine. Seen in that light, the intervention in Ukraine is not only to further strategic interests, but also Russian moral values and sense of honor.", "answer": "Eastern Orthodox", "sentence": "This illiberal ideology emphasizes the uniqueness of the \u201cRussian World\u201d with its Eastern Orthodox faith, and is providing Russian foreign policy with a renewed regional assertiveness as an Orthodox power that will protect its perceived core: Russia, Belarus and Ukraine.", "paragraph_sentence": "Re \u201cCounterrevolutionary Russia\u201d (June 26) by Roger Cohen: There have been two alternative social, political and intellectual currents with deep roots in Russia. The neo-Slavophile current exerted significant influence in the past and is re-emerging as a strong political orientation in Vladimir Putin\u2019s Russia, as Mr. Cohen notes with alarm. This illiberal ideology emphasizes the uniqueness of the \u201cRussian World\u201d with its Eastern Orthodox faith, and is providing Russian foreign policy with a renewed regional assertiveness as an Orthodox power that will protect its perceived core: Russia, Belarus and Ukraine. Seen in that light, the intervention in Ukraine is not only to further strategic interests, but also Russian moral values and sense of honor.", "paragraph_answer": "Re \u201cCounterrevolutionary Russia\u201d (June 26) by Roger Cohen: There have been two alternative social, political and intellectual currents with deep roots in Russia. The neo-Slavophile current exerted significant influence in the past and is re-emerging as a strong political orientation in Vladimir Putin\u2019s Russia, as Mr. Cohen notes with alarm. This illiberal ideology emphasizes the uniqueness of the \u201cRussian World\u201d with its Eastern Orthodox faith, and is providing Russian foreign policy with a renewed regional assertiveness as an Orthodox power that will protect its perceived core: Russia, Belarus and Ukraine. Seen in that light, the intervention in Ukraine is not only to further strategic interests, but also Russian moral values and sense of honor.", "sentence_answer": "This illiberal ideology emphasizes the uniqueness of the \u201cRussian World\u201d with its Eastern Orthodox faith, and is providing Russian foreign policy with a renewed regional assertiveness as an Orthodox power that will protect its perceived core: Russia, Belarus and Ukraine."} +{"question": "Under which leader did the Neo-Westernizer current exert itself?", "paragraph": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West, which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y.", "answer": "Mikhail Gorbachev", "sentence": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals.", "paragraph_sentence": " The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West, which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y.", "paragraph_answer": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West, which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y.", "sentence_answer": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals."} +{"question": "Which current is anti-Western?", "paragraph": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West, which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y.", "answer": "actually seeks integration with the West", "sentence": "In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West , which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure.", "paragraph_sentence": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West , which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y.", "paragraph_answer": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West , which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y.", "sentence_answer": "In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West , which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure."} +{"question": "Which current is popular in Russia today?", "paragraph": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West, which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y.", "answer": "neo-Slavophile", "sentence": "In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West, which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure.", "paragraph_sentence": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West, which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y.", "paragraph_answer": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West, which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y.", "sentence_answer": "In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West, which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure."} +{"question": "Where is Reza Fakhari from?", "paragraph": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West, which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y.", "answer": "Brooklyn, N.Y.", "sentence": "Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y.", "paragraph_sentence": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West, which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y. ", "paragraph_answer": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West, which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y. ", "sentence_answer": "Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y. "} +{"question": "Which outlook encourages integration with the West?", "paragraph": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer, which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West, which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y.", "answer": "the neo-Westernizer", "sentence": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer , which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals.", "paragraph_sentence": " The other current has been the neo-Westernizer , which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West, which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y.", "paragraph_answer": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer , which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals. In contrast to the neo-Slavophile current that is anti-Western, this liberal rival outlook actually seeks integration with the West, which Mr. Gorbachev assiduously pursued during his tenure. Unimagined opportunities for cooperation to fashion a more peaceful world may have been possible if Mr. Gorbachev had been able to continue his revolution. Unfortunately, given the popularity of the neo-Slavophile current in today\u2019s Russia, the world is facing a new Cold War. Reza Fakhari, Brooklyn, N.Y.", "sentence_answer": "The other current has been the neo-Westernizer , which re-exerted itself strongly during the Mikhail Gorbachev years and gave rise to his world-transforming ideas and ideals."} +{"question": "How was Frank's diary written?", "paragraph": "But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963. \u201cI tried to match passages,\u201d Ms. Vaughn said. She added that when reading Frank\u2019s diary, which is in epistolary form, she would think, \u201cWhat does she say that might spark a response from him?\u201d", "answer": "epistolary form", "sentence": "She added that when reading Frank\u2019s diary, which is in epistolary form , she would think, \u201cWhat does she say that might spark a response from him?\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963. \u201cI tried to match passages,\u201d Ms. Vaughn said. She added that when reading Frank\u2019s diary, which is in epistolary form , she would think, \u201cWhat does she say that might spark a response from him?\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963. \u201cI tried to match passages,\u201d Ms. Vaughn said. She added that when reading Frank\u2019s diary, which is in epistolary form , she would think, \u201cWhat does she say that might spark a response from him?\u201d", "sentence_answer": "She added that when reading Frank\u2019s diary, which is in epistolary form , she would think, \u201cWhat does she say that might spark a response from him?\u201d"} +{"question": "Who did Dr King write his letters to?", "paragraph": "But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963. \u201cI tried to match passages,\u201d Ms. Vaughn said. She added that when reading Frank\u2019s diary, which is in epistolary form, she would think, \u201cWhat does she say that might spark a response from him?\u201d", "answer": "Southern white clergymen", "sentence": "But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963.", "paragraph_sentence": " But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963. \u201cI tried to match passages,\u201d Ms. Vaughn said. She added that when reading Frank\u2019s diary, which is in epistolary form, she would think, \u201cWhat does she say that might spark a response from him?\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963. \u201cI tried to match passages,\u201d Ms. Vaughn said. She added that when reading Frank\u2019s diary, which is in epistolary form, she would think, \u201cWhat does she say that might spark a response from him?\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963."} +{"question": "Where was Dr King when he wrote his letters?", "paragraph": "But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963. \u201cI tried to match passages,\u201d Ms. Vaughn said. She added that when reading Frank\u2019s diary, which is in epistolary form, she would think, \u201cWhat does she say that might spark a response from him?\u201d", "answer": "a Birmingham Jail", "sentence": "But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail ,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963.", "paragraph_sentence": " But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail ,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963. \u201cI tried to match passages,\u201d Ms. Vaughn said. She added that when reading Frank\u2019s diary, which is in epistolary form, she would think, \u201cWhat does she say that might spark a response from him?\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail ,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963. \u201cI tried to match passages,\u201d Ms. Vaughn said. She added that when reading Frank\u2019s diary, which is in epistolary form, she would think, \u201cWhat does she say that might spark a response from him?\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail ,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963."} +{"question": "How far apart were the two works written?", "paragraph": "But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963. \u201cI tried to match passages,\u201d Ms. Vaughn said. She added that when reading Frank\u2019s diary, which is in epistolary form, she would think, \u201cWhat does she say that might spark a response from him?\u201d", "answer": "two decades", "sentence": "But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963.", "paragraph_sentence": " But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963. \u201cI tried to match passages,\u201d Ms. Vaughn said. She added that when reading Frank\u2019s diary, which is in epistolary form, she would think, \u201cWhat does she say that might spark a response from him?\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963. \u201cI tried to match passages,\u201d Ms. Vaughn said. She added that when reading Frank\u2019s diary, which is in epistolary form, she would think, \u201cWhat does she say that might spark a response from him?\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But everything they say is drawn from works produced two decades apart: \u201cThe Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition,\u201d the unexpurgated version of Frank\u2019s Holocaust journal, and \u201cLetter From a Birmingham Jail,\u201d a rebuke to Southern white clergymen that Dr. King wrote while imprisoned for civil disobedience in Alabama in 1963."} +{"question": "At what venue did the series take place?", "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": "Merkin Concert Hall", "sentence": "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.", "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": "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."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What time are the festivities?", "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": "11 a.m.", "sentence": "At 11 a.m. , 129 West 67th Street, Manhattan, 212-501-3330, kaufmanmusiccenter.org/mch.", "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": "At 11 a.m. , 129 West 67th Street, Manhattan, 212-501-3330, kaufmanmusiccenter.org/mch."} +{"question": "Who is the composer behind \"Guys and Dolls\"?", "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": "Frank Loesser", "sentence": "Broadway Playhouse: Frank Loesser (Sunday)", "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": "Broadway Playhouse: Frank Loesser (Sunday)"} +{"question": "Who wrote the musical \"The Bully\"?", "paragraph": "\u2018The Bully\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Vital Theater Company is reviving this ever-topical musical, by John Gregor and David L. Williams, which refreshingly avoids the trap of bullying its own audiences with heavy moralizing. Instead, the many pitfalls of the typical middle school relationship of victimizer and victim are revealed through wit, humor and a killer of a sly twist. (Through April 26.) At 3:30 p.m., McGinn-Cazale Theater, 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "answer": "John Gregor and David L. Williams", "sentence": "\u2018The Bully\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Vital Theater Company is reviving this ever-topical musical, by John Gregor and David L. Williams , which refreshingly avoids the trap of bullying its own audiences with heavy moralizing.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u2018The Bully\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Vital Theater Company is reviving this ever-topical musical, by John Gregor and David L. Williams , which refreshingly avoids the trap of bullying its own audiences with heavy moralizing. Instead, the many pitfalls of the typical middle school relationship of victimizer and victim are revealed through wit, humor and a killer of a sly twist. (Through April 26.) At 3:30 p.m., McGinn-Cazale Theater, 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018The Bully\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Vital Theater Company is reviving this ever-topical musical, by John Gregor and David L. Williams , which refreshingly avoids the trap of bullying its own audiences with heavy moralizing. Instead, the many pitfalls of the typical middle school relationship of victimizer and victim are revealed through wit, humor and a killer of a sly twist. (Through April 26.) At 3:30 p.m., McGinn-Cazale Theater, 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "sentence_answer": "\u2018The Bully\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Vital Theater Company is reviving this ever-topical musical, by John Gregor and David L. Williams , which refreshingly avoids the trap of bullying its own audiences with heavy moralizing."} +{"question": "What is the final date of the show?", "paragraph": "\u2018The Bully\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Vital Theater Company is reviving this ever-topical musical, by John Gregor and David L. Williams, which refreshingly avoids the trap of bullying its own audiences with heavy moralizing. Instead, the many pitfalls of the typical middle school relationship of victimizer and victim are revealed through wit, humor and a killer of a sly twist. (Through April 26.) At 3:30 p.m., McGinn-Cazale Theater, 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "answer": "April 26", "sentence": "(Through April 26 .)", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018The Bully\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Vital Theater Company is reviving this ever-topical musical, by John Gregor and David L. Williams, which refreshingly avoids the trap of bullying its own audiences with heavy moralizing. Instead, the many pitfalls of the typical middle school relationship of victimizer and victim are revealed through wit, humor and a killer of a sly twist. (Through April 26 .) At 3:30 p.m., McGinn-Cazale Theater, 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018The Bully\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Vital Theater Company is reviving this ever-topical musical, by John Gregor and David L. Williams, which refreshingly avoids the trap of bullying its own audiences with heavy moralizing. Instead, the many pitfalls of the typical middle school relationship of victimizer and victim are revealed through wit, humor and a killer of a sly twist. (Through April 26 .) At 3:30 p.m., McGinn-Cazale Theater, 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "sentence_answer": "(Through April 26 .)"} +{"question": "What relationship is highlighted in the musical?", "paragraph": "\u2018The Bully\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Vital Theater Company is reviving this ever-topical musical, by John Gregor and David L. Williams, which refreshingly avoids the trap of bullying its own audiences with heavy moralizing. Instead, the many pitfalls of the typical middle school relationship of victimizer and victim are revealed through wit, humor and a killer of a sly twist. (Through April 26.) At 3:30 p.m., McGinn-Cazale Theater, 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "answer": "victimizer and victim", "sentence": "Instead, the many pitfalls of the typical middle school relationship of victimizer and victim are revealed through wit, humor and a killer of a sly twist.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018The Bully\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Vital Theater Company is reviving this ever-topical musical, by John Gregor and David L. Williams, which refreshingly avoids the trap of bullying its own audiences with heavy moralizing. Instead, the many pitfalls of the typical middle school relationship of victimizer and victim are revealed through wit, humor and a killer of a sly twist. (Through April 26.) At 3:30 p.m., McGinn-Cazale Theater, 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018The Bully\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Vital Theater Company is reviving this ever-topical musical, by John Gregor and David L. Williams, which refreshingly avoids the trap of bullying its own audiences with heavy moralizing. Instead, the many pitfalls of the typical middle school relationship of victimizer and victim are revealed through wit, humor and a killer of a sly twist. (Through April 26.) At 3:30 p.m., McGinn-Cazale Theater, 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "sentence_answer": "Instead, the many pitfalls of the typical middle school relationship of victimizer and victim are revealed through wit, humor and a killer of a sly twist."} +{"question": "At what venue can the show be seen?", "paragraph": "\u2018The Bully\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Vital Theater Company is reviving this ever-topical musical, by John Gregor and David L. Williams, which refreshingly avoids the trap of bullying its own audiences with heavy moralizing. Instead, the many pitfalls of the typical middle school relationship of victimizer and victim are revealed through wit, humor and a killer of a sly twist. (Through April 26.) At 3:30 p.m., McGinn-Cazale Theater, 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "answer": "Vital Theater Company", "sentence": "\u2018The Bully\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Vital Theater Company is reviving this ever-topical musical, by John Gregor and David L. Williams, which refreshingly avoids the trap of bullying its own audiences with heavy moralizing.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u2018The Bully\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Vital Theater Company is reviving this ever-topical musical, by John Gregor and David L. Williams, which refreshingly avoids the trap of bullying its own audiences with heavy moralizing. Instead, the many pitfalls of the typical middle school relationship of victimizer and victim are revealed through wit, humor and a killer of a sly twist. (Through April 26.) At 3:30 p.m., McGinn-Cazale Theater, 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018The Bully\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Vital Theater Company is reviving this ever-topical musical, by John Gregor and David L. Williams, which refreshingly avoids the trap of bullying its own audiences with heavy moralizing. Instead, the many pitfalls of the typical middle school relationship of victimizer and victim are revealed through wit, humor and a killer of a sly twist. (Through April 26.) At 3:30 p.m., McGinn-Cazale Theater, 2162 Broadway, at 76th Street, fourth floor, 212-579-0528, vitaltheatre.org.", "sentence_answer": "\u2018The Bully\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Vital Theater Company is reviving this ever-topical musical, by John Gregor and David L. Williams, which refreshingly avoids the trap of bullying its own audiences with heavy moralizing."} +{"question": "Who wrote the musical \"Can Do Duck?\"", "paragraph": "\u2018Can Do Duck: The Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) You\u2019ve heard about the little engine that could \u2014 now comes the little duck. Arielle Sosland, writer and director of this musical, based it on \u201cThe Can Do Duck\u201d series of children\u2019s books by her father, Morton Sosland, a child psychiatrist. The charming and interactive hourlong show, for ages 3 through 11, closes this weekend. It focuses on a duck family and a human family as they learn to face challenges with self-confidence and optimism. At 11 a.m., Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project, 45 Bleecker Street, near Lafayette Street, East Village, 866-811-4111, candoduckthemusical.com.", "answer": "Arielle Sosland", "sentence": "Arielle Sosland , writer and director of this musical, based it on \u201cThe Can Do Duck\u201d series of children\u2019s books by her father, Morton Sosland, a child psychiatrist.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Can Do Duck: The Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) You\u2019ve heard about the little engine that could \u2014 now comes the little duck. Arielle Sosland , writer and director of this musical, based it on \u201cThe Can Do Duck\u201d series of children\u2019s books by her father, Morton Sosland, a child psychiatrist. The charming and interactive hourlong show, for ages 3 through 11, closes this weekend. It focuses on a duck family and a human family as they learn to face challenges with self-confidence and optimism. At 11 a.m., Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project, 45 Bleecker Street, near Lafayette Street, East Village, 866-811-4111, candoduckthemusical.com.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Can Do Duck: The Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) You\u2019ve heard about the little engine that could \u2014 now comes the little duck. Arielle Sosland , writer and director of this musical, based it on \u201cThe Can Do Duck\u201d series of children\u2019s books by her father, Morton Sosland, a child psychiatrist. The charming and interactive hourlong show, for ages 3 through 11, closes this weekend. It focuses on a duck family and a human family as they learn to face challenges with self-confidence and optimism. At 11 a.m., Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project, 45 Bleecker Street, near Lafayette Street, East Village, 866-811-4111, candoduckthemusical.com.", "sentence_answer": " Arielle Sosland , writer and director of this musical, based it on \u201cThe Can Do Duck\u201d series of children\u2019s books by her father, Morton Sosland, a child psychiatrist."} +{"question": "What is Arielle's father's name?", "paragraph": "\u2018Can Do Duck: The Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) You\u2019ve heard about the little engine that could \u2014 now comes the little duck. Arielle Sosland, writer and director of this musical, based it on \u201cThe Can Do Duck\u201d series of children\u2019s books by her father, Morton Sosland, a child psychiatrist. The charming and interactive hourlong show, for ages 3 through 11, closes this weekend. It focuses on a duck family and a human family as they learn to face challenges with self-confidence and optimism. At 11 a.m., Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project, 45 Bleecker Street, near Lafayette Street, East Village, 866-811-4111, candoduckthemusical.com.", "answer": "Morton Sosland", "sentence": "Arielle Sosland, writer and director of this musical, based it on \u201cThe Can Do Duck\u201d series of children\u2019s books by her father, Morton Sosland , a child psychiatrist.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Can Do Duck: The Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) You\u2019ve heard about the little engine that could \u2014 now comes the little duck. Arielle Sosland, writer and director of this musical, based it on \u201cThe Can Do Duck\u201d series of children\u2019s books by her father, Morton Sosland , a child psychiatrist. The charming and interactive hourlong show, for ages 3 through 11, closes this weekend. It focuses on a duck family and a human family as they learn to face challenges with self-confidence and optimism. At 11 a.m., Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project, 45 Bleecker Street, near Lafayette Street, East Village, 866-811-4111, candoduckthemusical.com.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Can Do Duck: The Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) You\u2019ve heard about the little engine that could \u2014 now comes the little duck. Arielle Sosland, writer and director of this musical, based it on \u201cThe Can Do Duck\u201d series of children\u2019s books by her father, Morton Sosland , a child psychiatrist. The charming and interactive hourlong show, for ages 3 through 11, closes this weekend. It focuses on a duck family and a human family as they learn to face challenges with self-confidence and optimism. At 11 a.m., Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project, 45 Bleecker Street, near Lafayette Street, East Village, 866-811-4111, candoduckthemusical.com.", "sentence_answer": "Arielle Sosland, writer and director of this musical, based it on \u201cThe Can Do Duck\u201d series of children\u2019s books by her father, Morton Sosland , a child psychiatrist."} +{"question": "Where did the idea for the musical come from?", "paragraph": "\u2018Can Do Duck: The Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) You\u2019ve heard about the little engine that could \u2014 now comes the little duck. Arielle Sosland, writer and director of this musical, based it on \u201cThe Can Do Duck\u201d series of children\u2019s books by her father, Morton Sosland, a child psychiatrist. The charming and interactive hourlong show, for ages 3 through 11, closes this weekend. It focuses on a duck family and a human family as they learn to face challenges with self-confidence and optimism. At 11 a.m., Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project, 45 Bleecker Street, near Lafayette Street, East Village, 866-811-4111, candoduckthemusical.com.", "answer": "children\u2019s books by her father", "sentence": "Arielle Sosland, writer and director of this musical, based it on \u201cThe Can Do Duck\u201d series of children\u2019s books by her father , Morton Sosland, a child psychiatrist.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Can Do Duck: The Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) You\u2019ve heard about the little engine that could \u2014 now comes the little duck. Arielle Sosland, writer and director of this musical, based it on \u201cThe Can Do Duck\u201d series of children\u2019s books by her father , Morton Sosland, a child psychiatrist. The charming and interactive hourlong show, for ages 3 through 11, closes this weekend. It focuses on a duck family and a human family as they learn to face challenges with self-confidence and optimism. At 11 a.m., Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project, 45 Bleecker Street, near Lafayette Street, East Village, 866-811-4111, candoduckthemusical.com.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Can Do Duck: The Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) You\u2019ve heard about the little engine that could \u2014 now comes the little duck. Arielle Sosland, writer and director of this musical, based it on \u201cThe Can Do Duck\u201d series of children\u2019s books by her father , Morton Sosland, a child psychiatrist. The charming and interactive hourlong show, for ages 3 through 11, closes this weekend. It focuses on a duck family and a human family as they learn to face challenges with self-confidence and optimism. At 11 a.m., Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project, 45 Bleecker Street, near Lafayette Street, East Village, 866-811-4111, candoduckthemusical.com.", "sentence_answer": "Arielle Sosland, writer and director of this musical, based it on \u201cThe Can Do Duck\u201d series of children\u2019s books by her father , Morton Sosland, a child psychiatrist."} +{"question": "How so the duck family and human family overcome obstacles in this play?", "paragraph": "\u2018Can Do Duck: The Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) You\u2019ve heard about the little engine that could \u2014 now comes the little duck. Arielle Sosland, writer and director of this musical, based it on \u201cThe Can Do Duck\u201d series of children\u2019s books by her father, Morton Sosland, a child psychiatrist. The charming and interactive hourlong show, for ages 3 through 11, closes this weekend. It focuses on a duck family and a human family as they learn to face challenges with self-confidence and optimism. At 11 a.m., Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project, 45 Bleecker Street, near Lafayette Street, East Village, 866-811-4111, candoduckthemusical.com.", "answer": "with self-confidence and optimism", "sentence": "It focuses on a duck family and a human family as they learn to face challenges with self-confidence and optimism .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Can Do Duck: The Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) You\u2019ve heard about the little engine that could \u2014 now comes the little duck. Arielle Sosland, writer and director of this musical, based it on \u201cThe Can Do Duck\u201d series of children\u2019s books by her father, Morton Sosland, a child psychiatrist. The charming and interactive hourlong show, for ages 3 through 11, closes this weekend. It focuses on a duck family and a human family as they learn to face challenges with self-confidence and optimism . At 11 a.m., Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project, 45 Bleecker Street, near Lafayette Street, East Village, 866-811-4111, candoduckthemusical.com.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Can Do Duck: The Musical\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) You\u2019ve heard about the little engine that could \u2014 now comes the little duck. Arielle Sosland, writer and director of this musical, based it on \u201cThe Can Do Duck\u201d series of children\u2019s books by her father, Morton Sosland, a child psychiatrist. The charming and interactive hourlong show, for ages 3 through 11, closes this weekend. It focuses on a duck family and a human family as they learn to face challenges with self-confidence and optimism . At 11 a.m., Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project, 45 Bleecker Street, near Lafayette Street, East Village, 866-811-4111, candoduckthemusical.com.", "sentence_answer": "It focuses on a duck family and a human family as they learn to face challenges with self-confidence and optimism ."} +{"question": "What is the final date of the show?", "paragraph": "\u2018Jack and the Beanstalk\u2019 (Friday through Sunday, and Tuesday through Thursday) Many plants grow in Central Park, so why not a beanstalk? This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater, which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose. Bruce Cannon, the theater\u2019s artistic director, has revised the script, and a human actor now stars in the show along with the company\u2019s hand-built marionettes. (Through June 28.) Weekdays at 10:30 a.m. and noon, with an additional performance on Wednesdays at 2:30 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays at 1 p.m. Reservations required. 79th Street and the West Drive, Central Park, 212-988-9093, cityparksfoundation.org/arts.", "answer": "June 28", "sentence": "(Through June 28 .)", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Jack and the Beanstalk\u2019 (Friday through Sunday, and Tuesday through Thursday) Many plants grow in Central Park, so why not a beanstalk? This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater, which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose. Bruce Cannon, the theater\u2019s artistic director, has revised the script, and a human actor now stars in the show along with the company\u2019s hand-built marionettes. (Through June 28 .) Weekdays at 10:30 a.m. and noon, with an additional performance on Wednesdays at 2:30 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays at 1 p.m. Reservations required. 79th Street and the West Drive, Central Park, 212-988-9093, cityparksfoundation.org/arts.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Jack and the Beanstalk\u2019 (Friday through Sunday, and Tuesday through Thursday) Many plants grow in Central Park, so why not a beanstalk? This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater, which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose. Bruce Cannon, the theater\u2019s artistic director, has revised the script, and a human actor now stars in the show along with the company\u2019s hand-built marionettes. (Through June 28 .) Weekdays at 10:30 a.m. and noon, with an additional performance on Wednesdays at 2:30 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays at 1 p.m. Reservations required. 79th Street and the West Drive, Central Park, 212-988-9093, cityparksfoundation.org/arts.", "sentence_answer": "(Through June 28 .)"} +{"question": "At what venue does the play take place?", "paragraph": "\u2018Jack and the Beanstalk\u2019 (Friday through Sunday, and Tuesday through Thursday) Many plants grow in Central Park, so why not a beanstalk? This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater, which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose. Bruce Cannon, the theater\u2019s artistic director, has revised the script, and a human actor now stars in the show along with the company\u2019s hand-built marionettes. (Through June 28.) Weekdays at 10:30 a.m. and noon, with an additional performance on Wednesdays at 2:30 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays at 1 p.m. Reservations required. 79th Street and the West Drive, Central Park, 212-988-9093, cityparksfoundation.org/arts.", "answer": "Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater", "sentence": "This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater , which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Jack and the Beanstalk\u2019 (Friday through Sunday, and Tuesday through Thursday) Many plants grow in Central Park, so why not a beanstalk? This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater , which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose. Bruce Cannon, the theater\u2019s artistic director, has revised the script, and a human actor now stars in the show along with the company\u2019s hand-built marionettes. (Through June 28.) Weekdays at 10:30 a.m. and noon, with an additional performance on Wednesdays at 2:30 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays at 1 p.m. Reservations required. 79th Street and the West Drive, Central Park, 212-988-9093, cityparksfoundation.org/arts.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Jack and the Beanstalk\u2019 (Friday through Sunday, and Tuesday through Thursday) Many plants grow in Central Park, so why not a beanstalk? This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater , which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose. Bruce Cannon, the theater\u2019s artistic director, has revised the script, and a human actor now stars in the show along with the company\u2019s hand-built marionettes. (Through June 28.) Weekdays at 10:30 a.m. and noon, with an additional performance on Wednesdays at 2:30 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays at 1 p.m. Reservations required. 79th Street and the West Drive, Central Park, 212-988-9093, cityparksfoundation.org/arts.", "sentence_answer": "This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater , which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose."} +{"question": "What is the name of the character equivalent to Jack?", "paragraph": "\u2018Jack and the Beanstalk\u2019 (Friday through Sunday, and Tuesday through Thursday) Many plants grow in Central Park, so why not a beanstalk? This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater, which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose. Bruce Cannon, the theater\u2019s artistic director, has revised the script, and a human actor now stars in the show along with the company\u2019s hand-built marionettes. (Through June 28.) Weekdays at 10:30 a.m. and noon, with an additional performance on Wednesdays at 2:30 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays at 1 p.m. Reservations required. 79th Street and the West Drive, Central Park, 212-988-9093, cityparksfoundation.org/arts.", "answer": "Milford", "sentence": "This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater, which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford ), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Jack and the Beanstalk\u2019 (Friday through Sunday, and Tuesday through Thursday) Many plants grow in Central Park, so why not a beanstalk? This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater, which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford ), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose. Bruce Cannon, the theater\u2019s artistic director, has revised the script, and a human actor now stars in the show along with the company\u2019s hand-built marionettes. (Through June 28.) Weekdays at 10:30 a.m. and noon, with an additional performance on Wednesdays at 2:30 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays at 1 p.m. Reservations required. 79th Street and the West Drive, Central Park, 212-988-9093, cityparksfoundation.org/arts.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Jack and the Beanstalk\u2019 (Friday through Sunday, and Tuesday through Thursday) Many plants grow in Central Park, so why not a beanstalk? This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater, which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford ), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose. Bruce Cannon, the theater\u2019s artistic director, has revised the script, and a human actor now stars in the show along with the company\u2019s hand-built marionettes. (Through June 28.) Weekdays at 10:30 a.m. and noon, with an additional performance on Wednesdays at 2:30 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays at 1 p.m. Reservations required. 79th Street and the West Drive, Central Park, 212-988-9093, cityparksfoundation.org/arts.", "sentence_answer": "This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater, which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford ), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose."} +{"question": "Who is the artistic director at the theatre?", "paragraph": "\u2018Jack and the Beanstalk\u2019 (Friday through Sunday, and Tuesday through Thursday) Many plants grow in Central Park, so why not a beanstalk? This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater, which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose. Bruce Cannon, the theater\u2019s artistic director, has revised the script, and a human actor now stars in the show along with the company\u2019s hand-built marionettes. (Through June 28.) Weekdays at 10:30 a.m. and noon, with an additional performance on Wednesdays at 2:30 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays at 1 p.m. Reservations required. 79th Street and the West Drive, Central Park, 212-988-9093, cityparksfoundation.org/arts.", "answer": "Bruce Cannon", "sentence": "Bruce Cannon , the theater\u2019s artistic director, has revised the script, and a human actor now stars in the show along with the company\u2019s hand-built marionettes.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Jack and the Beanstalk\u2019 (Friday through Sunday, and Tuesday through Thursday) Many plants grow in Central Park, so why not a beanstalk? This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater, which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose. Bruce Cannon , the theater\u2019s artistic director, has revised the script, and a human actor now stars in the show along with the company\u2019s hand-built marionettes. (Through June 28.) Weekdays at 10:30 a.m. and noon, with an additional performance on Wednesdays at 2:30 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays at 1 p.m. Reservations required. 79th Street and the West Drive, Central Park, 212-988-9093, cityparksfoundation.org/arts.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Jack and the Beanstalk\u2019 (Friday through Sunday, and Tuesday through Thursday) Many plants grow in Central Park, so why not a beanstalk? This one will sprout indoors at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater, which is reviving Michael Alogna\u2019s adaptation of the classic fairy tale about Jack, the Giant (here named Milford), Dolly the Cow and the famous Golden Goose. Bruce Cannon , the theater\u2019s artistic director, has revised the script, and a human actor now stars in the show along with the company\u2019s hand-built marionettes. (Through June 28.) Weekdays at 10:30 a.m. and noon, with an additional performance on Wednesdays at 2:30 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays at 1 p.m. Reservations required. 79th Street and the West Drive, Central Park, 212-988-9093, cityparksfoundation.org/arts.", "sentence_answer": " Bruce Cannon , the theater\u2019s artistic director, has revised the script, and a human actor now stars in the show along with the company\u2019s hand-built marionettes."} +{"question": "What venue is known for its interactive murder mysteries?", "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": "Live In Theater", "sentence": "Live In Theater , known for its interactive murder mysteries, will present the case, a premiere production that unfolds throughout the museum galleries.", "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": " Live In Theater , known for its interactive murder mysteries, will present the case, a premiere production that unfolds throughout the museum galleries."} +{"question": "What is the name of the festival on Saturday and Sunday?", "paragraph": "New York International Children\u2019s Film Festival (Saturday and Sunday) This celebration of young people\u2019s cinema has never shied away from challenging films, and that\u2019s certainly true this second weekend of the festival, which offers two features that examine the Holocaust: Dennis Bots\u2019s \u201cSecrets of War,\u201d about two Dutch schoolboys whose friendship is threatened by their parents\u2019 opposing views on the Nazis (Saturday, for ages 9 and older), and Nicolas Vanier\u2019s \u201cBelle and Sebastian,\u201d from France, in which a boy and a reviled stray dog become involved in a Resistance mission (Sunday, for ages 7 and older). Options also include the Japanese Pop artist Takashi Murakami\u2019s sci-fi fantasy, \u201cJellyfish Eyes\u201d (Saturday, for ages 9 and older) and several programs of short films, including two retrospectives of Aardman Animations. (Through March 22. Tickets may be available at the door for screenings listed as sold out.) At various locations; full schedule is on the website; 212-349-0330, gkids.com/fest2015. \u2018Pilobolus Rules!\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Anyone can see a dance performed, but what about seeing it unperformed? In this program from the BAMkids series at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the renowned troupe Pilobolus will unspool four of its signature works \u2014 \u201cWalklyndon,\u201d \u201cPseudopodia,\u201d \u201cThe Transformation\u201d and \u201cAll Is Not Lost\u201d \u2014 so that children can gain insight into the creative process. Recommended for ages 6 through 11, the show promises to be hands-on and interactive. Saturday at 2 and 6 p.m., Sunday at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m., BAM Fisher, at the Fishman Space, 321 Ashland Place, near Lafayette Avenue, Fort Greene; 718-636-4100, bam.org/kids. \u2018The Pinkertonian Mystery\u2019 (Sunday) Young detectives should get their notebooks and magnifying glasses ready. The DiMenna Children\u2019s History Museum at the New-York Historical Society is asking them and their families to help solve a Victorian-era crime. Live In Theater, known for its interactive murder mysteries, will present the case, a premiere production that unfolds throughout the museum galleries. Young visitors will portray members of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency, out to capture a crook called El Diablo in 1875. (Also on April 12 and 26.) From 3 to 5 p.m., 170 Central Park West, at 77th Street, 212-873-3400, nyhistory.org. The Pop Ups (Sunday) The rock duo Jacob Stein and Jason Rabinowitz, otherwise known as the Pop Ups, are popping up again for a concert at the Jewish Museum. Featuring tunes from their Grammy-nominated children\u2019s album, \u201cAppetite for Construction,\u201d this interactive show features puppets and colorful props as well as music. It will take their intended audience \u2014 3- to 8-year-olds \u2014 on adventures involving treasure, mermaids, stars and the biggest crayons they\u2019ve ever seen. At 11:30 a.m., 1109 Fifth Avenue, at 92nd Street, 212-423-3337, thejewishmuseum.org. \u2018Rapunzarella White: A Fairly Fractured Tale\u2019 (Saturday) Yes, it\u2019s fractured, but it\u2019s also blended: In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden, Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch. These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming. (Through May 9.) At 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org. \u2018Sing Back, Brooklyn! With Lloyd H. Miller\u2019 (Saturday) The Bronx, Queens, Manhattan and Staten Island are invited to sing back, too, in this free family program at the Brooklyn Historical Society. Lloyd H. Miller, a proud son of Brooklyn and leader of the band the Deedle Deedle Dees, known for its tunes celebrating science and history, hosts this event \u2014 with singalongs, stories and skits \u2014 the first Saturday of every month. March is Women\u2019s History Month, so you can guess this Saturday\u2019s theme. At 11 a.m., 128 Pierrepont Street, near Clinton Street, Brooklyn Heights, 718-222-4111, brooklynhistory.org.", "answer": "New York International Children\u2019s Film Festival", "sentence": "New York International Children\u2019s Film Festival (Saturday and Sunday)", "paragraph_sentence": " New York International Children\u2019s Film Festival (Saturday and Sunday) This celebration of young people\u2019s cinema has never shied away from challenging films, and that\u2019s certainly true this second weekend of the festival, which offers two features that examine the Holocaust: Dennis Bots\u2019s \u201cSecrets of War,\u201d about two Dutch schoolboys whose friendship is threatened by their parents\u2019 opposing views on the Nazis (Saturday, for ages 9 and older), and Nicolas Vanier\u2019s \u201cBelle and Sebastian,\u201d from France, in which a boy and a reviled stray dog become involved in a Resistance mission (Sunday, for ages 7 and older). Options also include the Japanese Pop artist Takashi Murakami\u2019s sci-fi fantasy, \u201cJellyfish Eyes\u201d (Saturday, for ages 9 and older) and several programs of short films, including two retrospectives of Aardman Animations. (Through March 22. Tickets may be available at the door for screenings listed as sold out.) At various locations; full schedule is on the website; 212-349-0330, gkids.com/fest2015. \u2018Pilobolus Rules!\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Anyone can see a dance performed, but what about seeing it unperformed? In this program from the BAMkids series at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the renowned troupe Pilobolus will unspool four of its signature works \u2014 \u201cWalklyndon,\u201d \u201cPseudopodia,\u201d \u201cThe Transformation\u201d and \u201cAll Is Not Lost\u201d \u2014 so that children can gain insight into the creative process. Recommended for ages 6 through 11, the show promises to be hands-on and interactive. Saturday at 2 and 6 p.m., Sunday at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m., BAM Fisher, at the Fishman Space, 321 Ashland Place, near Lafayette Avenue, Fort Greene; 718-636-4100, bam.org/kids. \u2018The Pinkertonian Mystery\u2019 (Sunday) Young detectives should get their notebooks and magnifying glasses ready. The DiMenna Children\u2019s History Museum at the New-York Historical Society is asking them and their families to help solve a Victorian-era crime. Live In Theater, known for its interactive murder mysteries, will present the case, a premiere production that unfolds throughout the museum galleries. Young visitors will portray members of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency, out to capture a crook called El Diablo in 1875. (Also on April 12 and 26.) From 3 to 5 p.m., 170 Central Park West, at 77th Street, 212-873-3400, nyhistory.org. The Pop Ups (Sunday) The rock duo Jacob Stein and Jason Rabinowitz, otherwise known as the Pop Ups, are popping up again for a concert at the Jewish Museum. Featuring tunes from their Grammy-nominated children\u2019s album, \u201cAppetite for Construction,\u201d this interactive show features puppets and colorful props as well as music. It will take their intended audience \u2014 3- to 8-year-olds \u2014 on adventures involving treasure, mermaids, stars and the biggest crayons they\u2019ve ever seen. At 11:30 a.m., 1109 Fifth Avenue, at 92nd Street, 212-423-3337, thejewishmuseum.org. \u2018Rapunzarella White: A Fairly Fractured Tale\u2019 (Saturday) Yes, it\u2019s fractured, but it\u2019s also blended: In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden, Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch. These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming. (Through May 9.) At 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org. \u2018Sing Back, Brooklyn! With Lloyd H. Miller\u2019 (Saturday) The Bronx, Queens, Manhattan and Staten Island are invited to sing back, too, in this free family program at the Brooklyn Historical Society. Lloyd H. Miller, a proud son of Brooklyn and leader of the band the Deedle Deedle Dees, known for its tunes celebrating science and history, hosts this event \u2014 with singalongs, stories and skits \u2014 the first Saturday of every month. March is Women\u2019s History Month, so you can guess this Saturday\u2019s theme. At 11 a.m., 128 Pierrepont Street, near Clinton Street, Brooklyn Heights, 718-222-4111, brooklynhistory.org.", "paragraph_answer": " New York International Children\u2019s Film Festival (Saturday and Sunday) This celebration of young people\u2019s cinema has never shied away from challenging films, and that\u2019s certainly true this second weekend of the festival, which offers two features that examine the Holocaust: Dennis Bots\u2019s \u201cSecrets of War,\u201d about two Dutch schoolboys whose friendship is threatened by their parents\u2019 opposing views on the Nazis (Saturday, for ages 9 and older), and Nicolas Vanier\u2019s \u201cBelle and Sebastian,\u201d from France, in which a boy and a reviled stray dog become involved in a Resistance mission (Sunday, for ages 7 and older). Options also include the Japanese Pop artist Takashi Murakami\u2019s sci-fi fantasy, \u201cJellyfish Eyes\u201d (Saturday, for ages 9 and older) and several programs of short films, including two retrospectives of Aardman Animations. (Through March 22. Tickets may be available at the door for screenings listed as sold out.) At various locations; full schedule is on the website; 212-349-0330, gkids.com/fest2015. \u2018Pilobolus Rules!\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Anyone can see a dance performed, but what about seeing it unperformed? In this program from the BAMkids series at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the renowned troupe Pilobolus will unspool four of its signature works \u2014 \u201cWalklyndon,\u201d \u201cPseudopodia,\u201d \u201cThe Transformation\u201d and \u201cAll Is Not Lost\u201d \u2014 so that children can gain insight into the creative process. Recommended for ages 6 through 11, the show promises to be hands-on and interactive. Saturday at 2 and 6 p.m., Sunday at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m., BAM Fisher, at the Fishman Space, 321 Ashland Place, near Lafayette Avenue, Fort Greene; 718-636-4100, bam.org/kids. \u2018The Pinkertonian Mystery\u2019 (Sunday) Young detectives should get their notebooks and magnifying glasses ready. The DiMenna Children\u2019s History Museum at the New-York Historical Society is asking them and their families to help solve a Victorian-era crime. Live In Theater, known for its interactive murder mysteries, will present the case, a premiere production that unfolds throughout the museum galleries. Young visitors will portray members of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency, out to capture a crook called El Diablo in 1875. (Also on April 12 and 26.) From 3 to 5 p.m., 170 Central Park West, at 77th Street, 212-873-3400, nyhistory.org. The Pop Ups (Sunday) The rock duo Jacob Stein and Jason Rabinowitz, otherwise known as the Pop Ups, are popping up again for a concert at the Jewish Museum. Featuring tunes from their Grammy-nominated children\u2019s album, \u201cAppetite for Construction,\u201d this interactive show features puppets and colorful props as well as music. It will take their intended audience \u2014 3- to 8-year-olds \u2014 on adventures involving treasure, mermaids, stars and the biggest crayons they\u2019ve ever seen. At 11:30 a.m., 1109 Fifth Avenue, at 92nd Street, 212-423-3337, thejewishmuseum.org. \u2018Rapunzarella White: A Fairly Fractured Tale\u2019 (Saturday) Yes, it\u2019s fractured, but it\u2019s also blended: In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden, Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch. These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming. (Through May 9.) At 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org. \u2018Sing Back, Brooklyn! With Lloyd H. Miller\u2019 (Saturday) The Bronx, Queens, Manhattan and Staten Island are invited to sing back, too, in this free family program at the Brooklyn Historical Society. Lloyd H. Miller, a proud son of Brooklyn and leader of the band the Deedle Deedle Dees, known for its tunes celebrating science and history, hosts this event \u2014 with singalongs, stories and skits \u2014 the first Saturday of every month. March is Women\u2019s History Month, so you can guess this Saturday\u2019s theme. At 11 a.m., 128 Pierrepont Street, near Clinton Street, Brooklyn Heights, 718-222-4111, brooklynhistory.org.", "sentence_answer": " New York International Children\u2019s Film Festival (Saturday and Sunday)"} +{"question": "What age group is recommended for works \"Pseudopodia\" and \"Walklyndon\"?", "paragraph": "New York International Children\u2019s Film Festival (Saturday and Sunday) This celebration of young people\u2019s cinema has never shied away from challenging films, and that\u2019s certainly true this second weekend of the festival, which offers two features that examine the Holocaust: Dennis Bots\u2019s \u201cSecrets of War,\u201d about two Dutch schoolboys whose friendship is threatened by their parents\u2019 opposing views on the Nazis (Saturday, for ages 9 and older), and Nicolas Vanier\u2019s \u201cBelle and Sebastian,\u201d from France, in which a boy and a reviled stray dog become involved in a Resistance mission (Sunday, for ages 7 and older). Options also include the Japanese Pop artist Takashi Murakami\u2019s sci-fi fantasy, \u201cJellyfish Eyes\u201d (Saturday, for ages 9 and older) and several programs of short films, including two retrospectives of Aardman Animations. (Through March 22. Tickets may be available at the door for screenings listed as sold out.) At various locations; full schedule is on the website; 212-349-0330, gkids.com/fest2015. \u2018Pilobolus Rules!\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Anyone can see a dance performed, but what about seeing it unperformed? In this program from the BAMkids series at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the renowned troupe Pilobolus will unspool four of its signature works \u2014 \u201cWalklyndon,\u201d \u201cPseudopodia,\u201d \u201cThe Transformation\u201d and \u201cAll Is Not Lost\u201d \u2014 so that children can gain insight into the creative process. Recommended for ages 6 through 11, the show promises to be hands-on and interactive. Saturday at 2 and 6 p.m., Sunday at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m., BAM Fisher, at the Fishman Space, 321 Ashland Place, near Lafayette Avenue, Fort Greene; 718-636-4100, bam.org/kids. \u2018The Pinkertonian Mystery\u2019 (Sunday) Young detectives should get their notebooks and magnifying glasses ready. The DiMenna Children\u2019s History Museum at the New-York Historical Society is asking them and their families to help solve a Victorian-era crime. Live In Theater, known for its interactive murder mysteries, will present the case, a premiere production that unfolds throughout the museum galleries. Young visitors will portray members of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency, out to capture a crook called El Diablo in 1875. (Also on April 12 and 26.) From 3 to 5 p.m., 170 Central Park West, at 77th Street, 212-873-3400, nyhistory.org. The Pop Ups (Sunday) The rock duo Jacob Stein and Jason Rabinowitz, otherwise known as the Pop Ups, are popping up again for a concert at the Jewish Museum. Featuring tunes from their Grammy-nominated children\u2019s album, \u201cAppetite for Construction,\u201d this interactive show features puppets and colorful props as well as music. It will take their intended audience \u2014 3- to 8-year-olds \u2014 on adventures involving treasure, mermaids, stars and the biggest crayons they\u2019ve ever seen. At 11:30 a.m., 1109 Fifth Avenue, at 92nd Street, 212-423-3337, thejewishmuseum.org. \u2018Rapunzarella White: A Fairly Fractured Tale\u2019 (Saturday) Yes, it\u2019s fractured, but it\u2019s also blended: In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden, Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch. These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming. (Through May 9.) At 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org. \u2018Sing Back, Brooklyn! With Lloyd H. Miller\u2019 (Saturday) The Bronx, Queens, Manhattan and Staten Island are invited to sing back, too, in this free family program at the Brooklyn Historical Society. Lloyd H. Miller, a proud son of Brooklyn and leader of the band the Deedle Deedle Dees, known for its tunes celebrating science and history, hosts this event \u2014 with singalongs, stories and skits \u2014 the first Saturday of every month. March is Women\u2019s History Month, so you can guess this Saturday\u2019s theme. At 11 a.m., 128 Pierrepont Street, near Clinton Street, Brooklyn Heights, 718-222-4111, brooklynhistory.org.", "answer": "6 through 11", "sentence": "Recommended for ages 6 through 11 , the show promises to be hands-on and interactive.", "paragraph_sentence": "New York International Children\u2019s Film Festival (Saturday and Sunday) This celebration of young people\u2019s cinema has never shied away from challenging films, and that\u2019s certainly true this second weekend of the festival, which offers two features that examine the Holocaust: Dennis Bots\u2019s \u201cSecrets of War,\u201d about two Dutch schoolboys whose friendship is threatened by their parents\u2019 opposing views on the Nazis (Saturday, for ages 9 and older), and Nicolas Vanier\u2019s \u201cBelle and Sebastian,\u201d from France, in which a boy and a reviled stray dog become involved in a Resistance mission (Sunday, for ages 7 and older). Options also include the Japanese Pop artist Takashi Murakami\u2019s sci-fi fantasy, \u201cJellyfish Eyes\u201d (Saturday, for ages 9 and older) and several programs of short films, including two retrospectives of Aardman Animations. (Through March 22. Tickets may be available at the door for screenings listed as sold out.) At various locations; full schedule is on the website; 212-349-0330, gkids.com/fest2015. \u2018Pilobolus Rules!\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Anyone can see a dance performed, but what about seeing it unperformed? In this program from the BAMkids series at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the renowned troupe Pilobolus will unspool four of its signature works \u2014 \u201cWalklyndon,\u201d \u201cPseudopodia,\u201d \u201cThe Transformation\u201d and \u201cAll Is Not Lost\u201d \u2014 so that children can gain insight into the creative process. Recommended for ages 6 through 11 , the show promises to be hands-on and interactive. Saturday at 2 and 6 p.m., Sunday at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m., BAM Fisher, at the Fishman Space, 321 Ashland Place, near Lafayette Avenue, Fort Greene; 718-636-4100, bam.org/kids. \u2018The Pinkertonian Mystery\u2019 (Sunday) Young detectives should get their notebooks and magnifying glasses ready. The DiMenna Children\u2019s History Museum at the New-York Historical Society is asking them and their families to help solve a Victorian-era crime. Live In Theater, known for its interactive murder mysteries, will present the case, a premiere production that unfolds throughout the museum galleries. Young visitors will portray members of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency, out to capture a crook called El Diablo in 1875. (Also on April 12 and 26.) From 3 to 5 p.m., 170 Central Park West, at 77th Street, 212-873-3400, nyhistory.org. The Pop Ups (Sunday) The rock duo Jacob Stein and Jason Rabinowitz, otherwise known as the Pop Ups, are popping up again for a concert at the Jewish Museum. Featuring tunes from their Grammy-nominated children\u2019s album, \u201cAppetite for Construction,\u201d this interactive show features puppets and colorful props as well as music. It will take their intended audience \u2014 3- to 8-year-olds \u2014 on adventures involving treasure, mermaids, stars and the biggest crayons they\u2019ve ever seen. At 11:30 a.m., 1109 Fifth Avenue, at 92nd Street, 212-423-3337, thejewishmuseum.org. \u2018Rapunzarella White: A Fairly Fractured Tale\u2019 (Saturday) Yes, it\u2019s fractured, but it\u2019s also blended: In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden, Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch. These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming. (Through May 9.) At 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org. \u2018Sing Back, Brooklyn! With Lloyd H. Miller\u2019 (Saturday) The Bronx, Queens, Manhattan and Staten Island are invited to sing back, too, in this free family program at the Brooklyn Historical Society. Lloyd H. Miller, a proud son of Brooklyn and leader of the band the Deedle Deedle Dees, known for its tunes celebrating science and history, hosts this event \u2014 with singalongs, stories and skits \u2014 the first Saturday of every month. March is Women\u2019s History Month, so you can guess this Saturday\u2019s theme. At 11 a.m., 128 Pierrepont Street, near Clinton Street, Brooklyn Heights, 718-222-4111, brooklynhistory.org.", "paragraph_answer": "New York International Children\u2019s Film Festival (Saturday and Sunday) This celebration of young people\u2019s cinema has never shied away from challenging films, and that\u2019s certainly true this second weekend of the festival, which offers two features that examine the Holocaust: Dennis Bots\u2019s \u201cSecrets of War,\u201d about two Dutch schoolboys whose friendship is threatened by their parents\u2019 opposing views on the Nazis (Saturday, for ages 9 and older), and Nicolas Vanier\u2019s \u201cBelle and Sebastian,\u201d from France, in which a boy and a reviled stray dog become involved in a Resistance mission (Sunday, for ages 7 and older). Options also include the Japanese Pop artist Takashi Murakami\u2019s sci-fi fantasy, \u201cJellyfish Eyes\u201d (Saturday, for ages 9 and older) and several programs of short films, including two retrospectives of Aardman Animations. (Through March 22. Tickets may be available at the door for screenings listed as sold out.) At various locations; full schedule is on the website; 212-349-0330, gkids.com/fest2015. \u2018Pilobolus Rules!\u2019 (Saturday and Sunday) Anyone can see a dance performed, but what about seeing it unperformed? In this program from the BAMkids series at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the renowned troupe Pilobolus will unspool four of its signature works \u2014 \u201cWalklyndon,\u201d \u201cPseudopodia,\u201d \u201cThe Transformation\u201d and \u201cAll Is Not Lost\u201d \u2014 so that children can gain insight into the creative process. Recommended for ages 6 through 11 , the show promises to be hands-on and interactive. Saturday at 2 and 6 p.m., Sunday at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m., BAM Fisher, at the Fishman Space, 321 Ashland Place, near Lafayette Avenue, Fort Greene; 718-636-4100, bam.org/kids. \u2018The Pinkertonian Mystery\u2019 (Sunday) Young detectives should get their notebooks and magnifying glasses ready. The DiMenna Children\u2019s History Museum at the New-York Historical Society is asking them and their families to help solve a Victorian-era crime. Live In Theater, known for its interactive murder mysteries, will present the case, a premiere production that unfolds throughout the museum galleries. Young visitors will portray members of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency, out to capture a crook called El Diablo in 1875. (Also on April 12 and 26.) From 3 to 5 p.m., 170 Central Park West, at 77th Street, 212-873-3400, nyhistory.org. The Pop Ups (Sunday) The rock duo Jacob Stein and Jason Rabinowitz, otherwise known as the Pop Ups, are popping up again for a concert at the Jewish Museum. Featuring tunes from their Grammy-nominated children\u2019s album, \u201cAppetite for Construction,\u201d this interactive show features puppets and colorful props as well as music. It will take their intended audience \u2014 3- to 8-year-olds \u2014 on adventures involving treasure, mermaids, stars and the biggest crayons they\u2019ve ever seen. At 11:30 a.m., 1109 Fifth Avenue, at 92nd Street, 212-423-3337, thejewishmuseum.org. \u2018Rapunzarella White: A Fairly Fractured Tale\u2019 (Saturday) Yes, it\u2019s fractured, but it\u2019s also blended: In this creative musical retelling, by June Rachelson-Ospa and Daniel Neiden, Rapunzel, Cinderella and Snow White are infant triplets abducted by an ill-tempered witch. These heroines aren\u2019t like their traditional selves \u2014 Snow White, for instance, is allergic to apples \u2014 and neither are their princes, who may be more clumsy than charming. (Through May 9.) At 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., 13th Street Repertory Theater, 50 West 13th Street, Greenwich Village, 212-352-3101, 13thstreetrep.org. \u2018Sing Back, Brooklyn! With Lloyd H. Miller\u2019 (Saturday) The Bronx, Queens, Manhattan and Staten Island are invited to sing back, too, in this free family program at the Brooklyn Historical Society. Lloyd H. Miller, a proud son of Brooklyn and leader of the band the Deedle Deedle Dees, known for its tunes celebrating science and history, hosts this event \u2014 with singalongs, stories and skits \u2014 the first Saturday of every month. March is Women\u2019s History Month, so you can guess this Saturday\u2019s theme. At 11 a.m., 128 Pierrepont Street, near Clinton Street, Brooklyn Heights, 718-222-4111, brooklynhistory.org.", "sentence_answer": "Recommended for ages 6 through 11 , the show promises to be hands-on and interactive."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What is the final date of the show?", "paragraph": "\u2018Tunes With Tina\u2019 (Sunday) That\u2019s Tina deVaron, a jazz musician and singer, whose musical brunch for young people at the Measure Lounge at Langham Place, Fifth Avenue, a hotel in Midtown Manhattan, has returned. Ms. deVaron, who often sings show tunes for children, also improvises and gears her performances to the audience. On selected Sundays throughout the season, she will be accompanied by Broadway performers. Singing along is encouraged. (Through May 31.) At noon, 400 Fifth Avenue, at 36th Street, 212-695-4005, measurenyc.com. Vered and the Babes (Saturday) This trio \u2014 Vered Ronen, Rob Jost and Matt Hilgenberg \u2014 play some percussion children can understand: pots and pans. Of course, they\u2019ll also perform on more conventional instruments, like French horn and trumpet, at this free concert, part of the Saturday Morning Show series for families at Brookfield Place. Known for a style reminiscent of doo-wop, they\u2019ll offer tunes from their hit album, \u201cGood Morning My Love.\u201d At 11 a.m., 200 Vesey Street, at West Street, Lower Manhattan, brookfieldplaceny.com/eventscalendar.", "answer": "May 31", "sentence": "(Through May 31 .)", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Tunes With Tina\u2019 (Sunday) That\u2019s Tina deVaron, a jazz musician and singer, whose musical brunch for young people at the Measure Lounge at Langham Place, Fifth Avenue, a hotel in Midtown Manhattan, has returned. Ms. deVaron, who often sings show tunes for children, also improvises and gears her performances to the audience. On selected Sundays throughout the season, she will be accompanied by Broadway performers. Singing along is encouraged. (Through May 31 .) At noon, 400 Fifth Avenue, at 36th Street, 212-695-4005, measurenyc.com. Vered and the Babes (Saturday) This trio \u2014 Vered Ronen, Rob Jost and Matt Hilgenberg \u2014 play some percussion children can understand: pots and pans. Of course, they\u2019ll also perform on more conventional instruments, like French horn and trumpet, at this free concert, part of the Saturday Morning Show series for families at Brookfield Place. Known for a style reminiscent of doo-wop, they\u2019ll offer tunes from their hit album, \u201cGood Morning My Love.\u201d At 11 a.m., 200 Vesey Street, at West Street, Lower Manhattan, brookfieldplaceny.com/eventscalendar.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Tunes With Tina\u2019 (Sunday) That\u2019s Tina deVaron, a jazz musician and singer, whose musical brunch for young people at the Measure Lounge at Langham Place, Fifth Avenue, a hotel in Midtown Manhattan, has returned. Ms. deVaron, who often sings show tunes for children, also improvises and gears her performances to the audience. On selected Sundays throughout the season, she will be accompanied by Broadway performers. Singing along is encouraged. (Through May 31 .) At noon, 400 Fifth Avenue, at 36th Street, 212-695-4005, measurenyc.com. Vered and the Babes (Saturday) This trio \u2014 Vered Ronen, Rob Jost and Matt Hilgenberg \u2014 play some percussion children can understand: pots and pans. Of course, they\u2019ll also perform on more conventional instruments, like French horn and trumpet, at this free concert, part of the Saturday Morning Show series for families at Brookfield Place. Known for a style reminiscent of doo-wop, they\u2019ll offer tunes from their hit album, \u201cGood Morning My Love.\u201d At 11 a.m., 200 Vesey Street, at West Street, Lower Manhattan, brookfieldplaceny.com/eventscalendar.", "sentence_answer": "(Through May 31 .)"} +{"question": "What genre of music does Tina play?", "paragraph": "\u2018Tunes With Tina\u2019 (Sunday) That\u2019s Tina deVaron, a jazz musician and singer, whose musical brunch for young people at the Measure Lounge at Langham Place, Fifth Avenue, a hotel in Midtown Manhattan, has returned. Ms. deVaron, who often sings show tunes for children, also improvises and gears her performances to the audience. On selected Sundays throughout the season, she will be accompanied by Broadway performers. Singing along is encouraged. (Through May 31.) At noon, 400 Fifth Avenue, at 36th Street, 212-695-4005, measurenyc.com. Vered and the Babes (Saturday) This trio \u2014 Vered Ronen, Rob Jost and Matt Hilgenberg \u2014 play some percussion children can understand: pots and pans. Of course, they\u2019ll also perform on more conventional instruments, like French horn and trumpet, at this free concert, part of the Saturday Morning Show series for families at Brookfield Place. Known for a style reminiscent of doo-wop, they\u2019ll offer tunes from their hit album, \u201cGood Morning My Love.\u201d At 11 a.m., 200 Vesey Street, at West Street, Lower Manhattan, brookfieldplaceny.com/eventscalendar.", "answer": "jazz", "sentence": "a jazz musician and singer, whose musical brunch for young people at the Measure Lounge at Langham Place, Fifth Avenue, a hotel in Midtown Manhattan, has returned.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Tunes With Tina\u2019 (Sunday) That\u2019s Tina deVaron, a jazz musician and singer, whose musical brunch for young people at the Measure Lounge at Langham Place, Fifth Avenue, a hotel in Midtown Manhattan, has returned. Ms. deVaron, who often sings show tunes for children, also improvises and gears her performances to the audience. On selected Sundays throughout the season, she will be accompanied by Broadway performers. Singing along is encouraged. (Through May 31.) At noon, 400 Fifth Avenue, at 36th Street, 212-695-4005, measurenyc.com. Vered and the Babes (Saturday) This trio \u2014 Vered Ronen, Rob Jost and Matt Hilgenberg \u2014 play some percussion children can understand: pots and pans. Of course, they\u2019ll also perform on more conventional instruments, like French horn and trumpet, at this free concert, part of the Saturday Morning Show series for families at Brookfield Place. Known for a style reminiscent of doo-wop, they\u2019ll offer tunes from their hit album, \u201cGood Morning My Love.\u201d At 11 a.m., 200 Vesey Street, at West Street, Lower Manhattan, brookfieldplaceny.com/eventscalendar.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Tunes With Tina\u2019 (Sunday) That\u2019s Tina deVaron, a jazz musician and singer, whose musical brunch for young people at the Measure Lounge at Langham Place, Fifth Avenue, a hotel in Midtown Manhattan, has returned. Ms. deVaron, who often sings show tunes for children, also improvises and gears her performances to the audience. On selected Sundays throughout the season, she will be accompanied by Broadway performers. Singing along is encouraged. (Through May 31.) At noon, 400 Fifth Avenue, at 36th Street, 212-695-4005, measurenyc.com. Vered and the Babes (Saturday) This trio \u2014 Vered Ronen, Rob Jost and Matt Hilgenberg \u2014 play some percussion children can understand: pots and pans. Of course, they\u2019ll also perform on more conventional instruments, like French horn and trumpet, at this free concert, part of the Saturday Morning Show series for families at Brookfield Place. Known for a style reminiscent of doo-wop, they\u2019ll offer tunes from their hit album, \u201cGood Morning My Love.\u201d At 11 a.m., 200 Vesey Street, at West Street, Lower Manhattan, brookfieldplaceny.com/eventscalendar.", "sentence_answer": "a jazz musician and singer, whose musical brunch for young people at the Measure Lounge at Langham Place, Fifth Avenue, a hotel in Midtown Manhattan, has returned."} +{"question": "Where does the Saturday morning show series take place?", "paragraph": "\u2018Tunes With Tina\u2019 (Sunday) That\u2019s Tina deVaron, a jazz musician and singer, whose musical brunch for young people at the Measure Lounge at Langham Place, Fifth Avenue, a hotel in Midtown Manhattan, has returned. Ms. deVaron, who often sings show tunes for children, also improvises and gears her performances to the audience. On selected Sundays throughout the season, she will be accompanied by Broadway performers. Singing along is encouraged. (Through May 31.) At noon, 400 Fifth Avenue, at 36th Street, 212-695-4005, measurenyc.com. Vered and the Babes (Saturday) This trio \u2014 Vered Ronen, Rob Jost and Matt Hilgenberg \u2014 play some percussion children can understand: pots and pans. Of course, they\u2019ll also perform on more conventional instruments, like French horn and trumpet, at this free concert, part of the Saturday Morning Show series for families at Brookfield Place. Known for a style reminiscent of doo-wop, they\u2019ll offer tunes from their hit album, \u201cGood Morning My Love.\u201d At 11 a.m., 200 Vesey Street, at West Street, Lower Manhattan, brookfieldplaceny.com/eventscalendar.", "answer": "Brookfield Place", "sentence": "Of course, they\u2019ll also perform on more conventional instruments, like French horn and trumpet, at this free concert, part of the Saturday Morning Show series for families at Brookfield Place .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Tunes With Tina\u2019 (Sunday) That\u2019s Tina deVaron, a jazz musician and singer, whose musical brunch for young people at the Measure Lounge at Langham Place, Fifth Avenue, a hotel in Midtown Manhattan, has returned. Ms. deVaron, who often sings show tunes for children, also improvises and gears her performances to the audience. On selected Sundays throughout the season, she will be accompanied by Broadway performers. Singing along is encouraged. (Through May 31.) At noon, 400 Fifth Avenue, at 36th Street, 212-695-4005, measurenyc.com. Vered and the Babes (Saturday) This trio \u2014 Vered Ronen, Rob Jost and Matt Hilgenberg \u2014 play some percussion children can understand: pots and pans. Of course, they\u2019ll also perform on more conventional instruments, like French horn and trumpet, at this free concert, part of the Saturday Morning Show series for families at Brookfield Place . Known for a style reminiscent of doo-wop, they\u2019ll offer tunes from their hit album, \u201cGood Morning My Love.\u201d At 11 a.m., 200 Vesey Street, at West Street, Lower Manhattan, brookfieldplaceny.com/eventscalendar.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Tunes With Tina\u2019 (Sunday) That\u2019s Tina deVaron, a jazz musician and singer, whose musical brunch for young people at the Measure Lounge at Langham Place, Fifth Avenue, a hotel in Midtown Manhattan, has returned. Ms. deVaron, who often sings show tunes for children, also improvises and gears her performances to the audience. On selected Sundays throughout the season, she will be accompanied by Broadway performers. Singing along is encouraged. (Through May 31.) At noon, 400 Fifth Avenue, at 36th Street, 212-695-4005, measurenyc.com. Vered and the Babes (Saturday) This trio \u2014 Vered Ronen, Rob Jost and Matt Hilgenberg \u2014 play some percussion children can understand: pots and pans. Of course, they\u2019ll also perform on more conventional instruments, like French horn and trumpet, at this free concert, part of the Saturday Morning Show series for families at Brookfield Place . Known for a style reminiscent of doo-wop, they\u2019ll offer tunes from their hit album, \u201cGood Morning My Love.\u201d At 11 a.m., 200 Vesey Street, at West Street, Lower Manhattan, brookfieldplaceny.com/eventscalendar.", "sentence_answer": "Of course, they\u2019ll also perform on more conventional instruments, like French horn and trumpet, at this free concert, part of the Saturday Morning Show series for families at Brookfield Place ."} +{"question": "When is Tina joined by Broadway performers for her shows?", "paragraph": "\u2018Tunes With Tina\u2019 (Sunday) That\u2019s Tina deVaron, a jazz musician and singer, whose musical brunch for young people at the Measure Lounge at Langham Place, Fifth Avenue, a hotel in Midtown Manhattan, has returned. Ms. deVaron, who often sings show tunes for children, also improvises and gears her performances to the audience. On selected Sundays throughout the season, she will be accompanied by Broadway performers. Singing along is encouraged. (Through May 31.) At noon, 400 Fifth Avenue, at 36th Street, 212-695-4005, measurenyc.com. Vered and the Babes (Saturday) This trio \u2014 Vered Ronen, Rob Jost and Matt Hilgenberg \u2014 play some percussion children can understand: pots and pans. Of course, they\u2019ll also perform on more conventional instruments, like French horn and trumpet, at this free concert, part of the Saturday Morning Show series for families at Brookfield Place. Known for a style reminiscent of doo-wop, they\u2019ll offer tunes from their hit album, \u201cGood Morning My Love.\u201d At 11 a.m., 200 Vesey Street, at West Street, Lower Manhattan, brookfieldplaceny.com/eventscalendar.", "answer": "Sundays", "sentence": "On selected Sundays throughout the season, she will be accompanied by Broadway performers.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Tunes With Tina\u2019 (Sunday) That\u2019s Tina deVaron, a jazz musician and singer, whose musical brunch for young people at the Measure Lounge at Langham Place, Fifth Avenue, a hotel in Midtown Manhattan, has returned. Ms. deVaron, who often sings show tunes for children, also improvises and gears her performances to the audience. On selected Sundays throughout the season, she will be accompanied by Broadway performers. Singing along is encouraged. (Through May 31.) At noon, 400 Fifth Avenue, at 36th Street, 212-695-4005, measurenyc.com. Vered and the Babes (Saturday) This trio \u2014 Vered Ronen, Rob Jost and Matt Hilgenberg \u2014 play some percussion children can understand: pots and pans. Of course, they\u2019ll also perform on more conventional instruments, like French horn and trumpet, at this free concert, part of the Saturday Morning Show series for families at Brookfield Place. Known for a style reminiscent of doo-wop, they\u2019ll offer tunes from their hit album, \u201cGood Morning My Love.\u201d At 11 a.m., 200 Vesey Street, at West Street, Lower Manhattan, brookfieldplaceny.com/eventscalendar.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Tunes With Tina\u2019 (Sunday) That\u2019s Tina deVaron, a jazz musician and singer, whose musical brunch for young people at the Measure Lounge at Langham Place, Fifth Avenue, a hotel in Midtown Manhattan, has returned. Ms. deVaron, who often sings show tunes for children, also improvises and gears her performances to the audience. On selected Sundays throughout the season, she will be accompanied by Broadway performers. Singing along is encouraged. (Through May 31.) At noon, 400 Fifth Avenue, at 36th Street, 212-695-4005, measurenyc.com. Vered and the Babes (Saturday) This trio \u2014 Vered Ronen, Rob Jost and Matt Hilgenberg \u2014 play some percussion children can understand: pots and pans. Of course, they\u2019ll also perform on more conventional instruments, like French horn and trumpet, at this free concert, part of the Saturday Morning Show series for families at Brookfield Place. Known for a style reminiscent of doo-wop, they\u2019ll offer tunes from their hit album, \u201cGood Morning My Love.\u201d At 11 a.m., 200 Vesey Street, at West Street, Lower Manhattan, brookfieldplaceny.com/eventscalendar.", "sentence_answer": "On selected Sundays throughout the season, she will be accompanied by Broadway performers."} +{"question": "Who is the black swan?", "paragraph": "Finally a major New York ballet company has a black swan. Misty Copeland\u2019s promotion to principal dancer at American Ballet Theater this summer put ballet back on popular culture\u2019s map and ushered in a conversation about diversity in ballet. So what now? Classical ballet is still overwhelmingly white, but over the past few years diversity has finally become a priority. On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies.", "answer": "Misty Copeland", "sentence": "Misty Copeland \u2019s promotion to principal dancer at American Ballet Theater this summer put ballet back on popular culture\u2019s map and ushered in a conversation about diversity in ballet.", "paragraph_sentence": "Finally a major New York ballet company has a black swan. Misty Copeland \u2019s promotion to principal dancer at American Ballet Theater this summer put ballet back on popular culture\u2019s map and ushered in a conversation about diversity in ballet. So what now? Classical ballet is still overwhelmingly white, but over the past few years diversity has finally become a priority. On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies.", "paragraph_answer": "Finally a major New York ballet company has a black swan. Misty Copeland \u2019s promotion to principal dancer at American Ballet Theater this summer put ballet back on popular culture\u2019s map and ushered in a conversation about diversity in ballet. So what now? Classical ballet is still overwhelmingly white, but over the past few years diversity has finally become a priority. On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies.", "sentence_answer": " Misty Copeland \u2019s promotion to principal dancer at American Ballet Theater this summer put ballet back on popular culture\u2019s map and ushered in a conversation about diversity in ballet."} +{"question": "What is the majority white?", "paragraph": "Finally a major New York ballet company has a black swan. Misty Copeland\u2019s promotion to principal dancer at American Ballet Theater this summer put ballet back on popular culture\u2019s map and ushered in a conversation about diversity in ballet. So what now? Classical ballet is still overwhelmingly white, but over the past few years diversity has finally become a priority. On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies.", "answer": "Classical ballet", "sentence": "So what now? Classical ballet is still overwhelmingly white, but over the past few years diversity has finally become a priority.", "paragraph_sentence": "Finally a major New York ballet company has a black swan. Misty Copeland\u2019s promotion to principal dancer at American Ballet Theater this summer put ballet back on popular culture\u2019s map and ushered in a conversation about diversity in ballet. So what now? Classical ballet is still overwhelmingly white, but over the past few years diversity has finally become a priority. On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies.", "paragraph_answer": "Finally a major New York ballet company has a black swan. Misty Copeland\u2019s promotion to principal dancer at American Ballet Theater this summer put ballet back on popular culture\u2019s map and ushered in a conversation about diversity in ballet. So what now? Classical ballet is still overwhelmingly white, but over the past few years diversity has finally become a priority. On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies.", "sentence_answer": "So what now? Classical ballet is still overwhelmingly white, but over the past few years diversity has finally become a priority."} +{"question": "What stage is the black swan at?", "paragraph": "Finally a major New York ballet company has a black swan. Misty Copeland\u2019s promotion to principal dancer at American Ballet Theater this summer put ballet back on popular culture\u2019s map and ushered in a conversation about diversity in ballet. So what now? Classical ballet is still overwhelmingly white, but over the past few years diversity has finally become a priority. On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies.", "answer": "American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet", "sentence": "On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies.", "paragraph_sentence": "Finally a major New York ballet company has a black swan. Misty Copeland\u2019s promotion to principal dancer at American Ballet Theater this summer put ballet back on popular culture\u2019s map and ushered in a conversation about diversity in ballet. So what now? Classical ballet is still overwhelmingly white, but over the past few years diversity has finally become a priority. On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies. ", "paragraph_answer": "Finally a major New York ballet company has a black swan. Misty Copeland\u2019s promotion to principal dancer at American Ballet Theater this summer put ballet back on popular culture\u2019s map and ushered in a conversation about diversity in ballet. So what now? Classical ballet is still overwhelmingly white, but over the past few years diversity has finally become a priority. On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies.", "sentence_answer": "On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies."} +{"question": "Lincoln Center is known as what in terms of ballet?", "paragraph": "Finally a major New York ballet company has a black swan. Misty Copeland\u2019s promotion to principal dancer at American Ballet Theater this summer put ballet back on popular culture\u2019s map and ushered in a conversation about diversity in ballet. So what now? Classical ballet is still overwhelmingly white, but over the past few years diversity has finally become a priority. On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies.", "answer": "home base to both companies", "sentence": "On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies .", "paragraph_sentence": "Finally a major New York ballet company has a black swan. Misty Copeland\u2019s promotion to principal dancer at American Ballet Theater this summer put ballet back on popular culture\u2019s map and ushered in a conversation about diversity in ballet. So what now? Classical ballet is still overwhelmingly white, but over the past few years diversity has finally become a priority. On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies . ", "paragraph_answer": "Finally a major New York ballet company has a black swan. Misty Copeland\u2019s promotion to principal dancer at American Ballet Theater this summer put ballet back on popular culture\u2019s map and ushered in a conversation about diversity in ballet. So what now? Classical ballet is still overwhelmingly white, but over the past few years diversity has finally become a priority. On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies .", "sentence_answer": "On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies ."} +{"question": "There is diversity in ballet now, what dancers are changing that?", "paragraph": "Finally a major New York ballet company has a black swan. Misty Copeland\u2019s promotion to principal dancer at American Ballet Theater this summer put ballet back on popular culture\u2019s map and ushered in a conversation about diversity in ballet. So what now? Classical ballet is still overwhelmingly white, but over the past few years diversity has finally become a priority. On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies.", "answer": "Asian, Latino and multiracial", "sentence": "On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies.", "paragraph_sentence": "Finally a major New York ballet company has a black swan. Misty Copeland\u2019s promotion to principal dancer at American Ballet Theater this summer put ballet back on popular culture\u2019s map and ushered in a conversation about diversity in ballet. So what now? Classical ballet is still overwhelmingly white, but over the past few years diversity has finally become a priority. On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies. ", "paragraph_answer": "Finally a major New York ballet company has a black swan. Misty Copeland\u2019s promotion to principal dancer at American Ballet Theater this summer put ballet back on popular culture\u2019s map and ushered in a conversation about diversity in ballet. So what now? Classical ballet is still overwhelmingly white, but over the past few years diversity has finally become a priority. On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies.", "sentence_answer": "On the stages of American Ballet Theater and New York City Ballet black, Asian, Latino and multiracial dancers are beginning to change the face of ballet where it matters most: Lincoln Center, home base to both companies."} +{"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."} +{"question": "What is the main incentive for the company to change?", "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": "Money", "sentence": "Money is another incentive to change: The Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the Ford Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation have financed recent diversity initiatives.", "paragraph_sentence": "More than equality is at stake when Ms. Copeland \u2014 the first African-American principal female dancer in the company\u2019s 75-year history \u2014 dances. When a company is diverse, the audience becomes more diverse, too, and for those faced with aging, dwindling audiences, that is priceless. Money is another incentive to change: The Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the Ford Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation have financed recent diversity initiatives. The two major New York companies have realized that change starts with the schools. If it takes 10 years to make a dancer \u2014 and you can\u2019t waste a minute \u2014 diversifying ballet must begin with children. Both Ballet Theater\u2019s Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School and the School of American Ballet, the training ground for City Ballet, have initiated programs to spot and recruit young minority dancers.", "paragraph_answer": "More than equality is at stake when Ms. Copeland \u2014 the first African-American principal female dancer in the company\u2019s 75-year history \u2014 dances. When a company is diverse, the audience becomes more diverse, too, and for those faced with aging, dwindling audiences, that is priceless. Money is another incentive to change: The Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the Ford Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation have financed recent diversity initiatives. The two major New York companies have realized that change starts with the schools. If it takes 10 years to make a dancer \u2014 and you can\u2019t waste a minute \u2014 diversifying ballet must begin with children. Both Ballet Theater\u2019s Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School and the School of American Ballet, the training ground for City Ballet, have initiated programs to spot and recruit young minority dancers.", "sentence_answer": " Money is another incentive to change: The Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the Ford Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation have financed recent diversity initiatives."} +{"question": "How long does it take to become a 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": "10 years", "sentence": "If it takes 10 years to make a dancer \u2014 and you can\u2019t waste a minute \u2014 diversifying ballet must begin with children.", "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": "If it takes 10 years to make a dancer \u2014 and you can\u2019t waste a minute \u2014 diversifying ballet must begin with children."} +{"question": "The City Ballet recruited mainly what?", "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": "young minority dancers.", "sentence": "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_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": "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. "} +{"question": "Funding from two big companies financed what initiative in the schools?", "paragraph": "More than equality is at stake when Ms. Copeland \u2014 the first African-American principal female dancer in the company\u2019s 75-year history \u2014 dances. When a company is diverse, the audience becomes more diverse, too, and for those faced with aging, dwindling audiences, that is priceless. Money is another incentive to change: The Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the Ford Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation have financed recent diversity initiatives. The two major New York companies have realized that change starts with the schools. If it takes 10 years to make a dancer \u2014 and you can\u2019t waste a minute \u2014 diversifying ballet must begin with children. Both Ballet Theater\u2019s Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School and the School of American Ballet, the training ground for City Ballet, have initiated programs to spot and recruit young minority dancers.", "answer": "diversity", "sentence": "Money is another incentive to change: The Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the Ford Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation have financed recent diversity initiatives.", "paragraph_sentence": "More than equality is at stake when Ms. Copeland \u2014 the first African-American principal female dancer in the company\u2019s 75-year history \u2014 dances. When a company is diverse, the audience becomes more diverse, too, and for those faced with aging, dwindling audiences, that is priceless. Money is another incentive to change: The Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the Ford Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation have financed recent diversity initiatives. The two major New York companies have realized that change starts with the schools. If it takes 10 years to make a dancer \u2014 and you can\u2019t waste a minute \u2014 diversifying ballet must begin with children. Both Ballet Theater\u2019s Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School and the School of American Ballet, the training ground for City Ballet, have initiated programs to spot and recruit young minority dancers.", "paragraph_answer": "More than equality is at stake when Ms. Copeland \u2014 the first African-American principal female dancer in the company\u2019s 75-year history \u2014 dances. When a company is diverse, the audience becomes more diverse, too, and for those faced with aging, dwindling audiences, that is priceless. Money is another incentive to change: The Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the Ford Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation have financed recent diversity initiatives. The two major New York companies have realized that change starts with the schools. If it takes 10 years to make a dancer \u2014 and you can\u2019t waste a minute \u2014 diversifying ballet must begin with children. Both Ballet Theater\u2019s Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School and the School of American Ballet, the training ground for City Ballet, have initiated programs to spot and recruit young minority dancers.", "sentence_answer": "Money is another incentive to change: The Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the Ford Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation have financed recent diversity initiatives."} +{"question": "What does Silas Farley's father refer himself as?", "paragraph": "That seemingly small step led to an increased turnout for the school\u2019s free community auditions, which has dramatically shifted the minority presence in the children division. \u201cIt\u2019s gone Technicolor fast,\u201d said Silas Farley, a 21-year-old member of City Ballet whose mother is black and father is white. (He refers to himself as \u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d) Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen. \u201cWe are not a white company,\u201d he said. \u201cWe don\u2019t seek to be a black company. We don\u2019t seek to be half and half. I just want to be American.\u201d While it\u2019s still too soon to tell if the children discovered through recent community auditions will make it into City Ballet, since 2008-9, the school has graduated 36 minority dancers who have gone on to join professional companies. Eleven of those joined City Ballet. India Bradley, a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them. \u201cMore than anything in life,\u201d she said. \u201cI have actual dreams.\u201d Ms. Bradley, a Detroit native, found her way to the School of American Ballet through the Dance Theater of Harlem. One of her teachers, Andrea Long-Naidu \u2014 a former City Ballet dancer \u2014 encouraged her to audition for the school.", "answer": "\u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d", "sentence": "(He refers to himself as \u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d ) Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen.", "paragraph_sentence": "That seemingly small step led to an increased turnout for the school\u2019s free community auditions, which has dramatically shifted the minority presence in the children division. \u201cIt\u2019s gone Technicolor fast,\u201d said Silas Farley, a 21-year-old member of City Ballet whose mother is black and father is white. (He refers to himself as \u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d ) Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen. \u201cWe are not a white company,\u201d he said. \u201cWe don\u2019t seek to be a black company. We don\u2019t seek to be half and half. I just want to be American.\u201d While it\u2019s still too soon to tell if the children discovered through recent community auditions will make it into City Ballet, since 2008-9, the school has graduated 36 minority dancers who have gone on to join professional companies. Eleven of those joined City Ballet. India Bradley, a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them. \u201cMore than anything in life,\u201d she said. \u201cI have actual dreams.\u201d Ms. Bradley, a Detroit native, found her way to the School of American Ballet through the Dance Theater of Harlem. One of her teachers, Andrea Long-Naidu \u2014 a former City Ballet dancer \u2014 encouraged her to audition for the school.", "paragraph_answer": "That seemingly small step led to an increased turnout for the school\u2019s free community auditions, which has dramatically shifted the minority presence in the children division. \u201cIt\u2019s gone Technicolor fast,\u201d said Silas Farley, a 21-year-old member of City Ballet whose mother is black and father is white. (He refers to himself as \u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d ) Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen. \u201cWe are not a white company,\u201d he said. \u201cWe don\u2019t seek to be a black company. We don\u2019t seek to be half and half. I just want to be American.\u201d While it\u2019s still too soon to tell if the children discovered through recent community auditions will make it into City Ballet, since 2008-9, the school has graduated 36 minority dancers who have gone on to join professional companies. Eleven of those joined City Ballet. India Bradley, a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them. \u201cMore than anything in life,\u201d she said. \u201cI have actual dreams.\u201d Ms. Bradley, a Detroit native, found her way to the School of American Ballet through the Dance Theater of Harlem. One of her teachers, Andrea Long-Naidu \u2014 a former City Ballet dancer \u2014 encouraged her to audition for the school.", "sentence_answer": "(He refers to himself as \u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d ) Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen."} +{"question": "How many minority dancers have graduated since 2008/2009?", "paragraph": "That seemingly small step led to an increased turnout for the school\u2019s free community auditions, which has dramatically shifted the minority presence in the children division. \u201cIt\u2019s gone Technicolor fast,\u201d said Silas Farley, a 21-year-old member of City Ballet whose mother is black and father is white. (He refers to himself as \u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d) Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen. \u201cWe are not a white company,\u201d he said. \u201cWe don\u2019t seek to be a black company. We don\u2019t seek to be half and half. I just want to be American.\u201d While it\u2019s still too soon to tell if the children discovered through recent community auditions will make it into City Ballet, since 2008-9, the school has graduated 36 minority dancers who have gone on to join professional companies. Eleven of those joined City Ballet. India Bradley, a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them. \u201cMore than anything in life,\u201d she said. \u201cI have actual dreams.\u201d Ms. Bradley, a Detroit native, found her way to the School of American Ballet through the Dance Theater of Harlem. One of her teachers, Andrea Long-Naidu \u2014 a former City Ballet dancer \u2014 encouraged her to audition for the school.", "answer": "36", "sentence": "While it\u2019s still too soon to tell if the children discovered through recent community auditions will make it into City Ballet, since 2008-9, the school has graduated 36 minority dancers who have gone on to join professional companies.", "paragraph_sentence": "That seemingly small step led to an increased turnout for the school\u2019s free community auditions, which has dramatically shifted the minority presence in the children division. \u201cIt\u2019s gone Technicolor fast,\u201d said Silas Farley, a 21-year-old member of City Ballet whose mother is black and father is white. (He refers to himself as \u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d) Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen. \u201cWe are not a white company,\u201d he said. \u201cWe don\u2019t seek to be a black company. We don\u2019t seek to be half and half. I just want to be American.\u201d While it\u2019s still too soon to tell if the children discovered through recent community auditions will make it into City Ballet, since 2008-9, the school has graduated 36 minority dancers who have gone on to join professional companies. Eleven of those joined City Ballet. India Bradley, a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them. \u201cMore than anything in life,\u201d she said. \u201cI have actual dreams.\u201d Ms. Bradley, a Detroit native, found her way to the School of American Ballet through the Dance Theater of Harlem. One of her teachers, Andrea Long-Naidu \u2014 a former City Ballet dancer \u2014 encouraged her to audition for the school.", "paragraph_answer": "That seemingly small step led to an increased turnout for the school\u2019s free community auditions, which has dramatically shifted the minority presence in the children division. \u201cIt\u2019s gone Technicolor fast,\u201d said Silas Farley, a 21-year-old member of City Ballet whose mother is black and father is white. (He refers to himself as \u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d) Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen. \u201cWe are not a white company,\u201d he said. \u201cWe don\u2019t seek to be a black company. We don\u2019t seek to be half and half. I just want to be American.\u201d While it\u2019s still too soon to tell if the children discovered through recent community auditions will make it into City Ballet, since 2008-9, the school has graduated 36 minority dancers who have gone on to join professional companies. Eleven of those joined City Ballet. India Bradley, a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them. \u201cMore than anything in life,\u201d she said. \u201cI have actual dreams.\u201d Ms. Bradley, a Detroit native, found her way to the School of American Ballet through the Dance Theater of Harlem. One of her teachers, Andrea Long-Naidu \u2014 a former City Ballet dancer \u2014 encouraged her to audition for the school.", "sentence_answer": "While it\u2019s still too soon to tell if the children discovered through recent community auditions will make it into City Ballet, since 2008-9, the school has graduated 36 minority dancers who have gone on to join professional companies."} +{"question": "What does Peter Martins do at City Ballet?", "paragraph": "That seemingly small step led to an increased turnout for the school\u2019s free community auditions, which has dramatically shifted the minority presence in the children division. \u201cIt\u2019s gone Technicolor fast,\u201d said Silas Farley, a 21-year-old member of City Ballet whose mother is black and father is white. (He refers to himself as \u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d) Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen. \u201cWe are not a white company,\u201d he said. \u201cWe don\u2019t seek to be a black company. We don\u2019t seek to be half and half. I just want to be American.\u201d While it\u2019s still too soon to tell if the children discovered through recent community auditions will make it into City Ballet, since 2008-9, the school has graduated 36 minority dancers who have gone on to join professional companies. Eleven of those joined City Ballet. India Bradley, a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them. \u201cMore than anything in life,\u201d she said. \u201cI have actual dreams.\u201d Ms. Bradley, a Detroit native, found her way to the School of American Ballet through the Dance Theater of Harlem. One of her teachers, Andrea Long-Naidu \u2014 a former City Ballet dancer \u2014 encouraged her to audition for the school.", "answer": "ballet master in chief", "sentence": "Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen.", "paragraph_sentence": "That seemingly small step led to an increased turnout for the school\u2019s free community auditions, which has dramatically shifted the minority presence in the children division. \u201cIt\u2019s gone Technicolor fast,\u201d said Silas Farley, a 21-year-old member of City Ballet whose mother is black and father is white. (He refers to himself as \u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d) Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen. \u201cWe are not a white company,\u201d he said. \u201cWe don\u2019t seek to be a black company. We don\u2019t seek to be half and half. I just want to be American.\u201d While it\u2019s still too soon to tell if the children discovered through recent community auditions will make it into City Ballet, since 2008-9, the school has graduated 36 minority dancers who have gone on to join professional companies. Eleven of those joined City Ballet. India Bradley, a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them. \u201cMore than anything in life,\u201d she said. \u201cI have actual dreams.\u201d Ms. Bradley, a Detroit native, found her way to the School of American Ballet through the Dance Theater of Harlem. One of her teachers, Andrea Long-Naidu \u2014 a former City Ballet dancer \u2014 encouraged her to audition for the school.", "paragraph_answer": "That seemingly small step led to an increased turnout for the school\u2019s free community auditions, which has dramatically shifted the minority presence in the children division. \u201cIt\u2019s gone Technicolor fast,\u201d said Silas Farley, a 21-year-old member of City Ballet whose mother is black and father is white. (He refers to himself as \u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d) Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen. \u201cWe are not a white company,\u201d he said. \u201cWe don\u2019t seek to be a black company. We don\u2019t seek to be half and half. I just want to be American.\u201d While it\u2019s still too soon to tell if the children discovered through recent community auditions will make it into City Ballet, since 2008-9, the school has graduated 36 minority dancers who have gone on to join professional companies. Eleven of those joined City Ballet. India Bradley, a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them. \u201cMore than anything in life,\u201d she said. \u201cI have actual dreams.\u201d Ms. Bradley, a Detroit native, found her way to the School of American Ballet through the Dance Theater of Harlem. One of her teachers, Andrea Long-Naidu \u2014 a former City Ballet dancer \u2014 encouraged her to audition for the school.", "sentence_answer": "Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen."} +{"question": "Who started at a theater in Harlem?", "paragraph": "That seemingly small step led to an increased turnout for the school\u2019s free community auditions, which has dramatically shifted the minority presence in the children division. \u201cIt\u2019s gone Technicolor fast,\u201d said Silas Farley, a 21-year-old member of City Ballet whose mother is black and father is white. (He refers to himself as \u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d) Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen. \u201cWe are not a white company,\u201d he said. \u201cWe don\u2019t seek to be a black company. We don\u2019t seek to be half and half. I just want to be American.\u201d While it\u2019s still too soon to tell if the children discovered through recent community auditions will make it into City Ballet, since 2008-9, the school has graduated 36 minority dancers who have gone on to join professional companies. Eleven of those joined City Ballet. India Bradley, a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them. \u201cMore than anything in life,\u201d she said. \u201cI have actual dreams.\u201d Ms. Bradley, a Detroit native, found her way to the School of American Ballet through the Dance Theater of Harlem. One of her teachers, Andrea Long-Naidu \u2014 a former City Ballet dancer \u2014 encouraged her to audition for the school.", "answer": "India Bradley", "sentence": "India Bradley , a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them.", "paragraph_sentence": "That seemingly small step led to an increased turnout for the school\u2019s free community auditions, which has dramatically shifted the minority presence in the children division. \u201cIt\u2019s gone Technicolor fast,\u201d said Silas Farley, a 21-year-old member of City Ballet whose mother is black and father is white. (He refers to himself as \u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d) Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen. \u201cWe are not a white company,\u201d he said. \u201cWe don\u2019t seek to be a black company. We don\u2019t seek to be half and half. I just want to be American.\u201d While it\u2019s still too soon to tell if the children discovered through recent community auditions will make it into City Ballet, since 2008-9, the school has graduated 36 minority dancers who have gone on to join professional companies. Eleven of those joined City Ballet. India Bradley , a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them. \u201cMore than anything in life,\u201d she said. \u201cI have actual dreams.\u201d Ms. Bradley, a Detroit native, found her way to the School of American Ballet through the Dance Theater of Harlem. One of her teachers, Andrea Long-Naidu \u2014 a former City Ballet dancer \u2014 encouraged her to audition for the school.", "paragraph_answer": "That seemingly small step led to an increased turnout for the school\u2019s free community auditions, which has dramatically shifted the minority presence in the children division. \u201cIt\u2019s gone Technicolor fast,\u201d said Silas Farley, a 21-year-old member of City Ballet whose mother is black and father is white. (He refers to himself as \u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d) Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen. \u201cWe are not a white company,\u201d he said. \u201cWe don\u2019t seek to be a black company. We don\u2019t seek to be half and half. I just want to be American.\u201d While it\u2019s still too soon to tell if the children discovered through recent community auditions will make it into City Ballet, since 2008-9, the school has graduated 36 minority dancers who have gone on to join professional companies. Eleven of those joined City Ballet. India Bradley , a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them. \u201cMore than anything in life,\u201d she said. \u201cI have actual dreams.\u201d Ms. Bradley, a Detroit native, found her way to the School of American Ballet through the Dance Theater of Harlem. One of her teachers, Andrea Long-Naidu \u2014 a former City Ballet dancer \u2014 encouraged her to audition for the school.", "sentence_answer": " India Bradley , a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them."} +{"question": "Prior to being a teacher who was Andrea Long-Naidu?", "paragraph": "That seemingly small step led to an increased turnout for the school\u2019s free community auditions, which has dramatically shifted the minority presence in the children division. \u201cIt\u2019s gone Technicolor fast,\u201d said Silas Farley, a 21-year-old member of City Ballet whose mother is black and father is white. (He refers to himself as \u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d) Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen. \u201cWe are not a white company,\u201d he said. \u201cWe don\u2019t seek to be a black company. We don\u2019t seek to be half and half. I just want to be American.\u201d While it\u2019s still too soon to tell if the children discovered through recent community auditions will make it into City Ballet, since 2008-9, the school has graduated 36 minority dancers who have gone on to join professional companies. Eleven of those joined City Ballet. India Bradley, a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them. \u201cMore than anything in life,\u201d she said. \u201cI have actual dreams.\u201d Ms. Bradley, a Detroit native, found her way to the School of American Ballet through the Dance Theater of Harlem. One of her teachers, Andrea Long-Naidu \u2014 a former City Ballet dancer \u2014 encouraged her to audition for the school.", "answer": "a former City Ballet dancer", "sentence": "One of her teachers, Andrea Long-Naidu \u2014 a former City Ballet dancer \u2014 encouraged her to audition for the school.", "paragraph_sentence": "That seemingly small step led to an increased turnout for the school\u2019s free community auditions, which has dramatically shifted the minority presence in the children division. \u201cIt\u2019s gone Technicolor fast,\u201d said Silas Farley, a 21-year-old member of City Ballet whose mother is black and father is white. (He refers to himself as \u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d) Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen. \u201cWe are not a white company,\u201d he said. \u201cWe don\u2019t seek to be a black company. We don\u2019t seek to be half and half. I just want to be American.\u201d While it\u2019s still too soon to tell if the children discovered through recent community auditions will make it into City Ballet, since 2008-9, the school has graduated 36 minority dancers who have gone on to join professional companies. Eleven of those joined City Ballet. India Bradley, a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them. \u201cMore than anything in life,\u201d she said. \u201cI have actual dreams.\u201d Ms. Bradley, a Detroit native, found her way to the School of American Ballet through the Dance Theater of Harlem. One of her teachers, Andrea Long-Naidu \u2014 a former City Ballet dancer \u2014 encouraged her to audition for the school. ", "paragraph_answer": "That seemingly small step led to an increased turnout for the school\u2019s free community auditions, which has dramatically shifted the minority presence in the children division. \u201cIt\u2019s gone Technicolor fast,\u201d said Silas Farley, a 21-year-old member of City Ballet whose mother is black and father is white. (He refers to himself as \u201ca cultural gumbo.\u201d) Peter Martins, the ballet master in chief of City Ballet as well as the artistic director and chairman of faculty at the School of American Ballet, says that substantial change may take time, but it will happen. \u201cWe are not a white company,\u201d he said. \u201cWe don\u2019t seek to be a black company. We don\u2019t seek to be half and half. I just want to be American.\u201d While it\u2019s still too soon to tell if the children discovered through recent community auditions will make it into City Ballet, since 2008-9, the school has graduated 36 minority dancers who have gone on to join professional companies. Eleven of those joined City Ballet. India Bradley, a 17-year-old advanced student at the school said her ambition \u2014 obsession really \u2014 is to become one of them. \u201cMore than anything in life,\u201d she said. \u201cI have actual dreams.\u201d Ms. Bradley, a Detroit native, found her way to the School of American Ballet through the Dance Theater of Harlem. One of her teachers, Andrea Long-Naidu \u2014 a former City Ballet dancer \u2014 encouraged her to audition for the school.", "sentence_answer": "One of her teachers, Andrea Long-Naidu \u2014 a former City Ballet dancer \u2014 encouraged her to audition for the school."} +{"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."} +{"question": "Who named the apprentice's at the school?", "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": "Mr. Martins", "sentence": "Last spring, of the five apprentices Mr. Martins named for City Ballet only one was white.", "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": "Last spring, of the five apprentices Mr. Martins named for City Ballet only one was white."} +{"question": "What do the teachers want the dancers to do?", "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": "your tendu", "sentence": "\u201cThey just want you to do your tendu .", "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": "\u201cThey just want you to do your tendu ."} +{"question": "How many apprentices were named at City Ballet?", "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": "five", "sentence": "Last spring, of the five apprentices Mr. Martins named for City Ballet only one was white.", "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": "Last spring, of the five apprentices Mr. Martins named for City Ballet only one was white."} +{"question": "How many of the apprentices where white?", "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": "one", "sentence": "Last spring, of the five apprentices Mr. Martins named for City Ballet only one was white.", "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": "Last spring, of the five apprentices Mr. Martins named for City Ballet only one was white."} +{"question": "Who thinks it's a dancer's gift that makes them succeed?", "paragraph": "Mr. Farley is firm about what it takes for a ballet dancer to succeed. \u201cIt\u2019s about the particular person and about their particular gifts,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd the dancer\u2019s race and their socio-economic background and their parents\u2019 education \u2014 all of that is secondary or tertiary.\u201d But there\u2019s more to changing the racial makeup of ballet companies than the determination of individual dancers. And different generations see the issue differently. Theresa Ruth Howard, a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland, can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism.", "answer": "Mr. Farley", "sentence": "Mr. Farley is firm about what it takes for a ballet dancer to succeed.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Farley is firm about what it takes for a ballet dancer to succeed. \u201cIt\u2019s about the particular person and about their particular gifts,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd the dancer\u2019s race and their socio-economic background and their parents\u2019 education \u2014 all of that is secondary or tertiary.\u201d But there\u2019s more to changing the racial makeup of ballet companies than the determination of individual dancers. And different generations see the issue differently. Theresa Ruth Howard, a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland, can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism.", "paragraph_answer": " Mr. Farley is firm about what it takes for a ballet dancer to succeed. \u201cIt\u2019s about the particular person and about their particular gifts,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd the dancer\u2019s race and their socio-economic background and their parents\u2019 education \u2014 all of that is secondary or tertiary.\u201d But there\u2019s more to changing the racial makeup of ballet companies than the determination of individual dancers. And different generations see the issue differently. Theresa Ruth Howard, a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland, can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism.", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Farley is firm about what it takes for a ballet dancer to succeed."} +{"question": "Who see's the issues differently when it comes to diversity?", "paragraph": "Mr. Farley is firm about what it takes for a ballet dancer to succeed. \u201cIt\u2019s about the particular person and about their particular gifts,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd the dancer\u2019s race and their socio-economic background and their parents\u2019 education \u2014 all of that is secondary or tertiary.\u201d But there\u2019s more to changing the racial makeup of ballet companies than the determination of individual dancers. And different generations see the issue differently. Theresa Ruth Howard, a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland, can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism.", "answer": "different generations", "sentence": "And different generations see the issue differently.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Farley is firm about what it takes for a ballet dancer to succeed. \u201cIt\u2019s about the particular person and about their particular gifts,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd the dancer\u2019s race and their socio-economic background and their parents\u2019 education \u2014 all of that is secondary or tertiary.\u201d But there\u2019s more to changing the racial makeup of ballet companies than the determination of individual dancers. And different generations see the issue differently. Theresa Ruth Howard, a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland, can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Farley is firm about what it takes for a ballet dancer to succeed. \u201cIt\u2019s about the particular person and about their particular gifts,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd the dancer\u2019s race and their socio-economic background and their parents\u2019 education \u2014 all of that is secondary or tertiary.\u201d But there\u2019s more to changing the racial makeup of ballet companies than the determination of individual dancers. And different generations see the issue differently. Theresa Ruth Howard, a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland, can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism.", "sentence_answer": "And different generations see the issue differently."} +{"question": "Who was a former member of Dance Theater of Harlem?", "paragraph": "Mr. Farley is firm about what it takes for a ballet dancer to succeed. \u201cIt\u2019s about the particular person and about their particular gifts,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd the dancer\u2019s race and their socio-economic background and their parents\u2019 education \u2014 all of that is secondary or tertiary.\u201d But there\u2019s more to changing the racial makeup of ballet companies than the determination of individual dancers. And different generations see the issue differently. Theresa Ruth Howard, a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland, can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism.", "answer": "Theresa Ruth Howard", "sentence": "Theresa Ruth Howard , a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland, can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Farley is firm about what it takes for a ballet dancer to succeed. \u201cIt\u2019s about the particular person and about their particular gifts,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd the dancer\u2019s race and their socio-economic background and their parents\u2019 education \u2014 all of that is secondary or tertiary.\u201d But there\u2019s more to changing the racial makeup of ballet companies than the determination of individual dancers. And different generations see the issue differently. Theresa Ruth Howard , a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland, can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Farley is firm about what it takes for a ballet dancer to succeed. \u201cIt\u2019s about the particular person and about their particular gifts,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd the dancer\u2019s race and their socio-economic background and their parents\u2019 education \u2014 all of that is secondary or tertiary.\u201d But there\u2019s more to changing the racial makeup of ballet companies than the determination of individual dancers. And different generations see the issue differently. Theresa Ruth Howard , a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland, can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism.", "sentence_answer": " Theresa Ruth Howard , a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland, can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism."} +{"question": "A teacher wrote an article for what website?", "paragraph": "Mr. Farley is firm about what it takes for a ballet dancer to succeed. \u201cIt\u2019s about the particular person and about their particular gifts,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd the dancer\u2019s race and their socio-economic background and their parents\u2019 education \u2014 all of that is secondary or tertiary.\u201d But there\u2019s more to changing the racial makeup of ballet companies than the determination of individual dancers. And different generations see the issue differently. Theresa Ruth Howard, a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland, can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism.", "answer": "My Body My Image", "sentence": "Theresa Ruth Howard, a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland, can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Farley is firm about what it takes for a ballet dancer to succeed. \u201cIt\u2019s about the particular person and about their particular gifts,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd the dancer\u2019s race and their socio-economic background and their parents\u2019 education \u2014 all of that is secondary or tertiary.\u201d But there\u2019s more to changing the racial makeup of ballet companies than the determination of individual dancers. And different generations see the issue differently. Theresa Ruth Howard, a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland, can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Farley is firm about what it takes for a ballet dancer to succeed. \u201cIt\u2019s about the particular person and about their particular gifts,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd the dancer\u2019s race and their socio-economic background and their parents\u2019 education \u2014 all of that is secondary or tertiary.\u201d But there\u2019s more to changing the racial makeup of ballet companies than the determination of individual dancers. And different generations see the issue differently. Theresa Ruth Howard, a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland, can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism.", "sentence_answer": "Theresa Ruth Howard, a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland, can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism."} +{"question": "What did a particular website focus on?", "paragraph": "Mr. Farley is firm about what it takes for a ballet dancer to succeed. \u201cIt\u2019s about the particular person and about their particular gifts,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd the dancer\u2019s race and their socio-economic background and their parents\u2019 education \u2014 all of that is secondary or tertiary.\u201d But there\u2019s more to changing the racial makeup of ballet companies than the determination of individual dancers. And different generations see the issue differently. Theresa Ruth Howard, a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland, can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism.", "answer": "black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland", "sentence": "Theresa Ruth Howard, a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland , can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Farley is firm about what it takes for a ballet dancer to succeed. \u201cIt\u2019s about the particular person and about their particular gifts,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd the dancer\u2019s race and their socio-economic background and their parents\u2019 education \u2014 all of that is secondary or tertiary.\u201d But there\u2019s more to changing the racial makeup of ballet companies than the determination of individual dancers. And different generations see the issue differently. Theresa Ruth Howard, a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland , can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Farley is firm about what it takes for a ballet dancer to succeed. \u201cIt\u2019s about the particular person and about their particular gifts,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd the dancer\u2019s race and their socio-economic background and their parents\u2019 education \u2014 all of that is secondary or tertiary.\u201d But there\u2019s more to changing the racial makeup of ballet companies than the determination of individual dancers. And different generations see the issue differently. Theresa Ruth Howard, a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland , can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism.", "sentence_answer": "Theresa Ruth Howard, a teacher and former member of Dance Theater of Harlem who wrote a much-talked-about piece for the website My Body My Image focusing on the many black ballerinas that preceded Ms. Copeland , can\u2019t help but view diversity initiatives with some skepticism."} +{"question": "What were some of the panelists on a South Korean talk show about female defectors complaining about privately?", "paragraph": "SEOUL, South Korea \u2014 North Korean defectors can usually tell when other defectors are lying about their past. As a panelist on a South Korean talk show that features female defectors like me, I heard other panelists complain privately that a few of the guests must have been embellishing their stories. It\u2019s not uncommon to hear defectors claim they graduated from a prestigious North Korean university, for example, while the rest of the details of their lives suggest this was highly unlikely. If defectors say they had high-level connections in Pyongyang or came from an esteemed institution in the North, they can gain better employment in the South, where life can be very difficult for North Koreans.", "answer": "that a few of the guests must have been embellishing their stories", "sentence": "As a panelist on a South Korean talk show that features female defectors like me, I heard other panelists complain privately that a few of the guests must have been embellishing their stories .", "paragraph_sentence": "SEOUL, South Korea \u2014 North Korean defectors can usually tell when other defectors are lying about their past. As a panelist on a South Korean talk show that features female defectors like me, I heard other panelists complain privately that a few of the guests must have been embellishing their stories . It\u2019s not uncommon to hear defectors claim they graduated from a prestigious North Korean university, for example, while the rest of the details of their lives suggest this was highly unlikely. If defectors say they had high-level connections in Pyongyang or came from an esteemed institution in the North, they can gain better employment in the South, where life can be very difficult for North Koreans.", "paragraph_answer": "SEOUL, South Korea \u2014 North Korean defectors can usually tell when other defectors are lying about their past. As a panelist on a South Korean talk show that features female defectors like me, I heard other panelists complain privately that a few of the guests must have been embellishing their stories . It\u2019s not uncommon to hear defectors claim they graduated from a prestigious North Korean university, for example, while the rest of the details of their lives suggest this was highly unlikely. If defectors say they had high-level connections in Pyongyang or came from an esteemed institution in the North, they can gain better employment in the South, where life can be very difficult for North Koreans.", "sentence_answer": "As a panelist on a South Korean talk show that features female defectors like me, I heard other panelists complain privately that a few of the guests must have been embellishing their stories ."} +{"question": "What do some defectors lie about that some North Korean defectors can detect?", "paragraph": "SEOUL, South Korea \u2014 North Korean defectors can usually tell when other defectors are lying about their past. As a panelist on a South Korean talk show that features female defectors like me, I heard other panelists complain privately that a few of the guests must have been embellishing their stories. It\u2019s not uncommon to hear defectors claim they graduated from a prestigious North Korean university, for example, while the rest of the details of their lives suggest this was highly unlikely. If defectors say they had high-level connections in Pyongyang or came from an esteemed institution in the North, they can gain better employment in the South, where life can be very difficult for North Koreans.", "answer": "their past", "sentence": "SEOUL, South Korea \u2014 North Korean defectors can usually tell when other defectors are lying about their past .", "paragraph_sentence": " SEOUL, South Korea \u2014 North Korean defectors can usually tell when other defectors are lying about their past . As a panelist on a South Korean talk show that features female defectors like me, I heard other panelists complain privately that a few of the guests must have been embellishing their stories. It\u2019s not uncommon to hear defectors claim they graduated from a prestigious North Korean university, for example, while the rest of the details of their lives suggest this was highly unlikely. If defectors say they had high-level connections in Pyongyang or came from an esteemed institution in the North, they can gain better employment in the South, where life can be very difficult for North Koreans.", "paragraph_answer": "SEOUL, South Korea \u2014 North Korean defectors can usually tell when other defectors are lying about their past . As a panelist on a South Korean talk show that features female defectors like me, I heard other panelists complain privately that a few of the guests must have been embellishing their stories. It\u2019s not uncommon to hear defectors claim they graduated from a prestigious North Korean university, for example, while the rest of the details of their lives suggest this was highly unlikely. If defectors say they had high-level connections in Pyongyang or came from an esteemed institution in the North, they can gain better employment in the South, where life can be very difficult for North Koreans.", "sentence_answer": "SEOUL, South Korea \u2014 North Korean defectors can usually tell when other defectors are lying about their past ."} +{"question": "What lies do some North Korean defectors tell to gain better employment in the South??", "paragraph": "SEOUL, South Korea \u2014 North Korean defectors can usually tell when other defectors are lying about their past. As a panelist on a South Korean talk show that features female defectors like me, I heard other panelists complain privately that a few of the guests must have been embellishing their stories. It\u2019s not uncommon to hear defectors claim they graduated from a prestigious North Korean university, for example, while the rest of the details of their lives suggest this was highly unlikely. If defectors say they had high-level connections in Pyongyang or came from an esteemed institution in the North, they can gain better employment in the South, where life can be very difficult for North Koreans.", "answer": "they had high-level connections in Pyongyang or came from an esteemed institution in the North", "sentence": "If defectors say they had high-level connections in Pyongyang or came from an esteemed institution in the North , they can gain better employment in the South, where life can be very difficult for North Koreans.", "paragraph_sentence": "SEOUL, South Korea \u2014 North Korean defectors can usually tell when other defectors are lying about their past. As a panelist on a South Korean talk show that features female defectors like me, I heard other panelists complain privately that a few of the guests must have been embellishing their stories. It\u2019s not uncommon to hear defectors claim they graduated from a prestigious North Korean university, for example, while the rest of the details of their lives suggest this was highly unlikely. If defectors say they had high-level connections in Pyongyang or came from an esteemed institution in the North , they can gain better employment in the South, where life can be very difficult for North Koreans. ", "paragraph_answer": "SEOUL, South Korea \u2014 North Korean defectors can usually tell when other defectors are lying about their past. As a panelist on a South Korean talk show that features female defectors like me, I heard other panelists complain privately that a few of the guests must have been embellishing their stories. It\u2019s not uncommon to hear defectors claim they graduated from a prestigious North Korean university, for example, while the rest of the details of their lives suggest this was highly unlikely. If defectors say they had high-level connections in Pyongyang or came from an esteemed institution in the North , they can gain better employment in the South, where life can be very difficult for North Koreans.", "sentence_answer": "If defectors say they had high-level connections in Pyongyang or came from an esteemed institution in the North , they can gain better employment in the South, where life can be very difficult for North Koreans."} +{"question": "What kind of talk show did the author mention being on?", "paragraph": "SEOUL, South Korea \u2014 North Korean defectors can usually tell when other defectors are lying about their past. As a panelist on a South Korean talk show that features female defectors like me, I heard other panelists complain privately that a few of the guests must have been embellishing their stories. It\u2019s not uncommon to hear defectors claim they graduated from a prestigious North Korean university, for example, while the rest of the details of their lives suggest this was highly unlikely. If defectors say they had high-level connections in Pyongyang or came from an esteemed institution in the North, they can gain better employment in the South, where life can be very difficult for North Koreans.", "answer": "a South Korean talk show that features female defectors", "sentence": "As a panelist on a South Korean talk show that features female defectors like me, I heard other panelists complain privately that a few of the guests must have been embellishing their stories.", "paragraph_sentence": "SEOUL, South Korea \u2014 North Korean defectors can usually tell when other defectors are lying about their past. As a panelist on a South Korean talk show that features female defectors like me, I heard other panelists complain privately that a few of the guests must have been embellishing their stories. It\u2019s not uncommon to hear defectors claim they graduated from a prestigious North Korean university, for example, while the rest of the details of their lives suggest this was highly unlikely. If defectors say they had high-level connections in Pyongyang or came from an esteemed institution in the North, they can gain better employment in the South, where life can be very difficult for North Koreans.", "paragraph_answer": "SEOUL, South Korea \u2014 North Korean defectors can usually tell when other defectors are lying about their past. As a panelist on a South Korean talk show that features female defectors like me, I heard other panelists complain privately that a few of the guests must have been embellishing their stories. It\u2019s not uncommon to hear defectors claim they graduated from a prestigious North Korean university, for example, while the rest of the details of their lives suggest this was highly unlikely. If defectors say they had high-level connections in Pyongyang or came from an esteemed institution in the North, they can gain better employment in the South, where life can be very difficult for North Koreans.", "sentence_answer": "As a panelist on a South Korean talk show that features female defectors like me, I heard other panelists complain privately that a few of the guests must have been embellishing their stories."} +{"question": "Where is North Korea do most of the defectors who lie claim to have high-level connections in?", "paragraph": "SEOUL, South Korea \u2014 North Korean defectors can usually tell when other defectors are lying about their past. As a panelist on a South Korean talk show that features female defectors like me, I heard other panelists complain privately that a few of the guests must have been embellishing their stories. It\u2019s not uncommon to hear defectors claim they graduated from a prestigious North Korean university, for example, while the rest of the details of their lives suggest this was highly unlikely. If defectors say they had high-level connections in Pyongyang or came from an esteemed institution in the North, they can gain better employment in the South, where life can be very difficult for North Koreans.", "answer": "Pyongyang", "sentence": "If defectors say they had high-level connections in Pyongyang or came from an esteemed institution in the North, they can gain better employment in the South, where life can be very difficult for North Koreans.", "paragraph_sentence": "SEOUL, South Korea \u2014 North Korean defectors can usually tell when other defectors are lying about their past. As a panelist on a South Korean talk show that features female defectors like me, I heard other panelists complain privately that a few of the guests must have been embellishing their stories. It\u2019s not uncommon to hear defectors claim they graduated from a prestigious North Korean university, for example, while the rest of the details of their lives suggest this was highly unlikely. If defectors say they had high-level connections in Pyongyang or came from an esteemed institution in the North, they can gain better employment in the South, where life can be very difficult for North Koreans. ", "paragraph_answer": "SEOUL, South Korea \u2014 North Korean defectors can usually tell when other defectors are lying about their past. As a panelist on a South Korean talk show that features female defectors like me, I heard other panelists complain privately that a few of the guests must have been embellishing their stories. It\u2019s not uncommon to hear defectors claim they graduated from a prestigious North Korean university, for example, while the rest of the details of their lives suggest this was highly unlikely. If defectors say they had high-level connections in Pyongyang or came from an esteemed institution in the North, they can gain better employment in the South, where life can be very difficult for North Koreans.", "sentence_answer": "If defectors say they had high-level connections in Pyongyang or came from an esteemed institution in the North, they can gain better employment in the South, where life can be very difficult for North Koreans."} +{"question": "What is the name of the prominent defector who told disturbing tales of torture?", "paragraph": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate. His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities. He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "answer": "Shin Dong-hyuk", "sentence": "Shin Dong-hyuk , a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate.", "paragraph_sentence": " Shin Dong-hyuk , a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate. His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities. He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "paragraph_answer": " Shin Dong-hyuk , a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate. His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities. He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "sentence_answer": " Shin Dong-hyuk , a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate."} +{"question": "How did Shin Dong-Hyuk shock the world several years ago?", "paragraph": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate. His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities. He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "answer": "with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags", "sentence": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags , confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate.", "paragraph_sentence": " Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags , confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate. His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities. He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "paragraph_answer": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags , confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate. His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities. He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "sentence_answer": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags , confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate."} +{"question": "What did Shin Dong-Hyuk confess to last month?", "paragraph": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate. His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities. He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "answer": "that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate", "sentence": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate .", "paragraph_sentence": " Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate . His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities. He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "paragraph_answer": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate . His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities. He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "sentence_answer": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate ."} +{"question": "Whose execution did Shin Dong-Hyuk claim to be forced to watch?", "paragraph": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate. His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities. He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "answer": "his mother and brother", "sentence": "His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother , led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities.", "paragraph_sentence": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate. His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother , led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities. He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "paragraph_answer": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate. His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother , led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities. He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "sentence_answer": "His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother , led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities."} +{"question": "What did Shin Dong-Hyuk's lie about having to witness his mother and brother's execution lead to?", "paragraph": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate. His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities. He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "answer": "a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities", "sentence": "His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities .", "paragraph_sentence": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate. His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities . He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "paragraph_answer": "Shin Dong-hyuk, a prominent defector who shocked the world several years back with his disturbing tales of torture in North Korean gulags, confessed last month that parts of the personal history he had told the public were inaccurate. His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities . He now says that instead of growing up in the notorious Camp 14, where most prisoners go to die, he spent most of his time in the less draconian Camp 18.", "sentence_answer": "His dramatic story, which included being forced to watch the execution of his mother and brother, led to a lot of publicity and his role as a key witness for a United Nations inquiry into North Korean atrocities ."} +{"question": "When did the United Nations release its damning report?", "paragraph": "After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014, Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin. It alleged he raped a 13-year-old girl and featured an interview with his father in North Korea who said they had never lived in a \u201cso-called political prison camp.\u201d At least one defector from Camp 18 recognized Mr. Shin\u2019s father as a fellow inmate, pressuring Mr. Shin to admit that his story didn\u2019t hold together, leading to the retraction.", "answer": "February 2014", "sentence": "After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014 , Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin.", "paragraph_sentence": " After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014 , Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin. It alleged he raped a 13-year-old girl and featured an interview with his father in North Korea who said they had never lived in a \u201cso-called political prison camp.\u201d At least one defector from Camp 18 recognized Mr. Shin\u2019s father as a fellow inmate, pressuring Mr. Shin to admit that his story didn\u2019t hold together, leading to the retraction.", "paragraph_answer": "After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014 , Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin. It alleged he raped a 13-year-old girl and featured an interview with his father in North Korea who said they had never lived in a \u201cso-called political prison camp.\u201d At least one defector from Camp 18 recognized Mr. Shin\u2019s father as a fellow inmate, pressuring Mr. Shin to admit that his story didn\u2019t hold together, leading to the retraction.", "sentence_answer": "After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014 , Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin."} +{"question": "What did Pyongyang's propaganda officials circulate?", "paragraph": "After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014, Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin. It alleged he raped a 13-year-old girl and featured an interview with his father in North Korea who said they had never lived in a \u201cso-called political prison camp.\u201d At least one defector from Camp 18 recognized Mr. Shin\u2019s father as a fellow inmate, pressuring Mr. Shin to admit that his story didn\u2019t hold together, leading to the retraction.", "answer": "a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin", "sentence": "After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014, Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin .", "paragraph_sentence": " After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014, Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin . It alleged he raped a 13-year-old girl and featured an interview with his father in North Korea who said they had never lived in a \u201cso-called political prison camp.\u201d At least one defector from Camp 18 recognized Mr. Shin\u2019s father as a fellow inmate, pressuring Mr. Shin to admit that his story didn\u2019t hold together, leading to the retraction.", "paragraph_answer": "After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014, Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin . It alleged he raped a 13-year-old girl and featured an interview with his father in North Korea who said they had never lived in a \u201cso-called political prison camp.\u201d At least one defector from Camp 18 recognized Mr. Shin\u2019s father as a fellow inmate, pressuring Mr. Shin to admit that his story didn\u2019t hold together, leading to the retraction.", "sentence_answer": "After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014, Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin ."} +{"question": "Who did the video feature wild accusations against?", "paragraph": "After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014, Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin. It alleged he raped a 13-year-old girl and featured an interview with his father in North Korea who said they had never lived in a \u201cso-called political prison camp.\u201d At least one defector from Camp 18 recognized Mr. Shin\u2019s father as a fellow inmate, pressuring Mr. Shin to admit that his story didn\u2019t hold together, leading to the retraction.", "answer": "Mr. Shin", "sentence": "After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014, Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin .", "paragraph_sentence": " After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014, Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin . It alleged he raped a 13-year-old girl and featured an interview with his father in North Korea who said they had never lived in a \u201cso-called political prison camp.\u201d At least one defector from Camp 18 recognized Mr. Shin\u2019s father as a fellow inmate, pressuring Mr. Shin to admit that his story didn\u2019t hold together, leading to the retraction.", "paragraph_answer": "After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014, Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin . It alleged he raped a 13-year-old girl and featured an interview with his father in North Korea who said they had never lived in a \u201cso-called political prison camp.\u201d At least one defector from Camp 18 recognized Mr. Shin\u2019s father as a fellow inmate, pressuring Mr. Shin to admit that his story didn\u2019t hold together, leading to the retraction.", "sentence_answer": "After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014, Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin ."} +{"question": "Who did the video allege that Mr. Shin raped?", "paragraph": "After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014, Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin. It alleged he raped a 13-year-old girl and featured an interview with his father in North Korea who said they had never lived in a \u201cso-called political prison camp.\u201d At least one defector from Camp 18 recognized Mr. Shin\u2019s father as a fellow inmate, pressuring Mr. Shin to admit that his story didn\u2019t hold together, leading to the retraction.", "answer": "a 13-year-old girl", "sentence": "It alleged he raped a 13-year-old girl and featured an interview with his father in North Korea who said they had never lived in a \u201cso-called political prison camp.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014, Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin. It alleged he raped a 13-year-old girl and featured an interview with his father in North Korea who said they had never lived in a \u201cso-called political prison camp.\u201d At least one defector from Camp 18 recognized Mr. Shin\u2019s father as a fellow inmate, pressuring Mr. Shin to admit that his story didn\u2019t hold together, leading to the retraction.", "paragraph_answer": "After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014, Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin. It alleged he raped a 13-year-old girl and featured an interview with his father in North Korea who said they had never lived in a \u201cso-called political prison camp.\u201d At least one defector from Camp 18 recognized Mr. Shin\u2019s father as a fellow inmate, pressuring Mr. Shin to admit that his story didn\u2019t hold together, leading to the retraction.", "sentence_answer": "It alleged he raped a 13-year-old girl and featured an interview with his father in North Korea who said they had never lived in a \u201cso-called political prison camp.\u201d"} +{"question": "Who was interviewed in the video released by Pyongyang's propaganda officials?", "paragraph": "After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014, Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin. It alleged he raped a 13-year-old girl and featured an interview with his father in North Korea who said they had never lived in a \u201cso-called political prison camp.\u201d At least one defector from Camp 18 recognized Mr. Shin\u2019s father as a fellow inmate, pressuring Mr. Shin to admit that his story didn\u2019t hold together, leading to the retraction.", "answer": "Mr. Shin\u2019s father", "sentence": "At least one defector from Camp 18 recognized Mr. Shin\u2019s father as a fellow inmate, pressuring Mr. Shin to admit that his story didn\u2019t hold together, leading to the retraction.", "paragraph_sentence": "After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014, Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin. It alleged he raped a 13-year-old girl and featured an interview with his father in North Korea who said they had never lived in a \u201cso-called political prison camp.\u201d At least one defector from Camp 18 recognized Mr. Shin\u2019s father as a fellow inmate, pressuring Mr. Shin to admit that his story didn\u2019t hold together, leading to the retraction. ", "paragraph_answer": "After the United Nations came out with its damning report in February 2014, Pyongyang\u2019s propaganda officials circulated a video featuring wild accusations against Mr. Shin. It alleged he raped a 13-year-old girl and featured an interview with his father in North Korea who said they had never lived in a \u201cso-called political prison camp.\u201d At least one defector from Camp 18 recognized Mr. Shin\u2019s father as a fellow inmate, pressuring Mr. Shin to admit that his story didn\u2019t hold together, leading to the retraction.", "sentence_answer": "At least one defector from Camp 18 recognized Mr. Shin\u2019s father as a fellow inmate, pressuring Mr. Shin to admit that his story didn\u2019t hold together, leading to the retraction."} +{"question": "What do the doctors who examined Mr. Shin believe?", "paragraph": "Mr. Shin has been examined by doctors who believe he was subjected to torture and child labor, given the evidence of his scars and unnaturally bowed arms. We shouldn\u2019t lose sight of that when discussing his lies. It\u2019s easy to see how Mr. Shin was tempted to obscure the truth. For defectors, sometimes doing so is the only way to survive. My own story starts with my escape in 1997, when I was 17. I did not crawl through a tunnel or over an electrified-wire fence, nor was I spirited in disguise across the demilitarized zone. I lived near the border with China, and one night I simply left home and walked across the iced-over river that separated the two countries. I was fortunate that my family had close relationships with some of the border guards, so I was able to cross without incident. At the time, I thought I would return home after a brief visit. I stayed in hiding for a while, learning Chinese. Eventually my Chinese became so fluent that I could pass for a local. Still, I was terrified of being captured or betrayed, so I created a false identity. Staying in China provided me with the opportunity to adjust to life outside of North Korea, and to gain a sense of perspective, most importantly, by learning that so much of what I had been taught about my country was a lie. In the early days, I considered going to South Korea, but I had internalized everything I had been told my whole life: South Korea was the enemy. I believed going there would be a betrayal of my country \u2014 and that my family might be punished as a result. Ultimately, I learned that I could go to South Korea by giving up my real identity, which would ensure my family back home would be safe. Once I got there, I faced the same challenges as the 27,000 other defectors who have now made it to the South. They struggle from a lack of education and job skills, discrimination, loneliness and emotional turmoil. Many drop out of school. Suicide rates are unusually high. Many defectors who fail to acclimatize even return to the North. We have no way of knowing how many have returned \u2014 and it\u2019s unclear what eventually happens to them \u2014 but Pyongyang has started using these \u201cdouble defectors\u201d for its propaganda.", "answer": "he was subjected to torture and child labor", "sentence": "Mr. Shin has been examined by doctors who believe he was subjected to torture and child labor , given the evidence of his scars and unnaturally bowed arms.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Shin has been examined by doctors who believe he was subjected to torture and child labor , given the evidence of his scars and unnaturally bowed arms. We shouldn\u2019t lose sight of that when discussing his lies. It\u2019s easy to see how Mr. Shin was tempted to obscure the truth. For defectors, sometimes doing so is the only way to survive. My own story starts with my escape in 1997, when I was 17. I did not crawl through a tunnel or over an electrified-wire fence, nor was I spirited in disguise across the demilitarized zone. I lived near the border with China, and one night I simply left home and walked across the iced-over river that separated the two countries. I was fortunate that my family had close relationships with some of the border guards, so I was able to cross without incident. At the time, I thought I would return home after a brief visit. I stayed in hiding for a while, learning Chinese. Eventually my Chinese became so fluent that I could pass for a local. Still, I was terrified of being captured or betrayed, so I created a false identity. Staying in China provided me with the opportunity to adjust to life outside of North Korea, and to gain a sense of perspective, most importantly, by learning that so much of what I had been taught about my country was a lie. In the early days, I considered going to South Korea, but I had internalized everything I had been told my whole life: South Korea was the enemy. I believed going there would be a betrayal of my country \u2014 and that my family might be punished as a result. Ultimately, I learned that I could go to South Korea by giving up my real identity, which would ensure my family back home would be safe. Once I got there, I faced the same challenges as the 27,000 other defectors who have now made it to the South. They struggle from a lack of education and job skills, discrimination, loneliness and emotional turmoil. Many drop out of school. Suicide rates are unusually high. Many defectors who fail to acclimatize even return to the North. We have no way of knowing how many have returned \u2014 and it\u2019s unclear what eventually happens to them \u2014 but Pyongyang has started using these \u201cdouble defectors\u201d for its propaganda.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Shin has been examined by doctors who believe he was subjected to torture and child labor , given the evidence of his scars and unnaturally bowed arms. We shouldn\u2019t lose sight of that when discussing his lies. It\u2019s easy to see how Mr. Shin was tempted to obscure the truth. For defectors, sometimes doing so is the only way to survive. My own story starts with my escape in 1997, when I was 17. I did not crawl through a tunnel or over an electrified-wire fence, nor was I spirited in disguise across the demilitarized zone. I lived near the border with China, and one night I simply left home and walked across the iced-over river that separated the two countries. I was fortunate that my family had close relationships with some of the border guards, so I was able to cross without incident. At the time, I thought I would return home after a brief visit. I stayed in hiding for a while, learning Chinese. Eventually my Chinese became so fluent that I could pass for a local. Still, I was terrified of being captured or betrayed, so I created a false identity. Staying in China provided me with the opportunity to adjust to life outside of North Korea, and to gain a sense of perspective, most importantly, by learning that so much of what I had been taught about my country was a lie. In the early days, I considered going to South Korea, but I had internalized everything I had been told my whole life: South Korea was the enemy. I believed going there would be a betrayal of my country \u2014 and that my family might be punished as a result. Ultimately, I learned that I could go to South Korea by giving up my real identity, which would ensure my family back home would be safe. Once I got there, I faced the same challenges as the 27,000 other defectors who have now made it to the South. They struggle from a lack of education and job skills, discrimination, loneliness and emotional turmoil. Many drop out of school. Suicide rates are unusually high. Many defectors who fail to acclimatize even return to the North. We have no way of knowing how many have returned \u2014 and it\u2019s unclear what eventually happens to them \u2014 but Pyongyang has started using these \u201cdouble defectors\u201d for its propaganda.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Shin has been examined by doctors who believe he was subjected to torture and child labor , given the evidence of his scars and unnaturally bowed arms."} +{"question": "What evidence did the doctors have to support their belief that Mr. Shin was subjected to torture and child labor?", "paragraph": "Mr. Shin has been examined by doctors who believe he was subjected to torture and child labor, given the evidence of his scars and unnaturally bowed arms. We shouldn\u2019t lose sight of that when discussing his lies. It\u2019s easy to see how Mr. Shin was tempted to obscure the truth. For defectors, sometimes doing so is the only way to survive. My own story starts with my escape in 1997, when I was 17. I did not crawl through a tunnel or over an electrified-wire fence, nor was I spirited in disguise across the demilitarized zone. I lived near the border with China, and one night I simply left home and walked across the iced-over river that separated the two countries. I was fortunate that my family had close relationships with some of the border guards, so I was able to cross without incident. At the time, I thought I would return home after a brief visit. I stayed in hiding for a while, learning Chinese. Eventually my Chinese became so fluent that I could pass for a local. Still, I was terrified of being captured or betrayed, so I created a false identity. Staying in China provided me with the opportunity to adjust to life outside of North Korea, and to gain a sense of perspective, most importantly, by learning that so much of what I had been taught about my country was a lie. In the early days, I considered going to South Korea, but I had internalized everything I had been told my whole life: South Korea was the enemy. I believed going there would be a betrayal of my country \u2014 and that my family might be punished as a result. Ultimately, I learned that I could go to South Korea by giving up my real identity, which would ensure my family back home would be safe. Once I got there, I faced the same challenges as the 27,000 other defectors who have now made it to the South. They struggle from a lack of education and job skills, discrimination, loneliness and emotional turmoil. Many drop out of school. Suicide rates are unusually high. Many defectors who fail to acclimatize even return to the North. We have no way of knowing how many have returned \u2014 and it\u2019s unclear what eventually happens to them \u2014 but Pyongyang has started using these \u201cdouble defectors\u201d for its propaganda.", "answer": "his scars and unnaturally bowed arms", "sentence": "Mr. Shin has been examined by doctors who believe he was subjected to torture and child labor, given the evidence of his scars and unnaturally bowed arms .", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Shin has been examined by doctors who believe he was subjected to torture and child labor, given the evidence of his scars and unnaturally bowed arms . We shouldn\u2019t lose sight of that when discussing his lies. It\u2019s easy to see how Mr. Shin was tempted to obscure the truth. For defectors, sometimes doing so is the only way to survive. My own story starts with my escape in 1997, when I was 17. I did not crawl through a tunnel or over an electrified-wire fence, nor was I spirited in disguise across the demilitarized zone. I lived near the border with China, and one night I simply left home and walked across the iced-over river that separated the two countries. I was fortunate that my family had close relationships with some of the border guards, so I was able to cross without incident. At the time, I thought I would return home after a brief visit. I stayed in hiding for a while, learning Chinese. Eventually my Chinese became so fluent that I could pass for a local. Still, I was terrified of being captured or betrayed, so I created a false identity. Staying in China provided me with the opportunity to adjust to life outside of North Korea, and to gain a sense of perspective, most importantly, by learning that so much of what I had been taught about my country was a lie. In the early days, I considered going to South Korea, but I had internalized everything I had been told my whole life: South Korea was the enemy. I believed going there would be a betrayal of my country \u2014 and that my family might be punished as a result. Ultimately, I learned that I could go to South Korea by giving up my real identity, which would ensure my family back home would be safe. Once I got there, I faced the same challenges as the 27,000 other defectors who have now made it to the South. They struggle from a lack of education and job skills, discrimination, loneliness and emotional turmoil. Many drop out of school. Suicide rates are unusually high. Many defectors who fail to acclimatize even return to the North. We have no way of knowing how many have returned \u2014 and it\u2019s unclear what eventually happens to them \u2014 but Pyongyang has started using these \u201cdouble defectors\u201d for its propaganda.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Shin has been examined by doctors who believe he was subjected to torture and child labor, given the evidence of his scars and unnaturally bowed arms . We shouldn\u2019t lose sight of that when discussing his lies. It\u2019s easy to see how Mr. Shin was tempted to obscure the truth. For defectors, sometimes doing so is the only way to survive. My own story starts with my escape in 1997, when I was 17. I did not crawl through a tunnel or over an electrified-wire fence, nor was I spirited in disguise across the demilitarized zone. I lived near the border with China, and one night I simply left home and walked across the iced-over river that separated the two countries. I was fortunate that my family had close relationships with some of the border guards, so I was able to cross without incident. At the time, I thought I would return home after a brief visit. I stayed in hiding for a while, learning Chinese. Eventually my Chinese became so fluent that I could pass for a local. Still, I was terrified of being captured or betrayed, so I created a false identity. Staying in China provided me with the opportunity to adjust to life outside of North Korea, and to gain a sense of perspective, most importantly, by learning that so much of what I had been taught about my country was a lie. In the early days, I considered going to South Korea, but I had internalized everything I had been told my whole life: South Korea was the enemy. I believed going there would be a betrayal of my country \u2014 and that my family might be punished as a result. Ultimately, I learned that I could go to South Korea by giving up my real identity, which would ensure my family back home would be safe. Once I got there, I faced the same challenges as the 27,000 other defectors who have now made it to the South. They struggle from a lack of education and job skills, discrimination, loneliness and emotional turmoil. Many drop out of school. Suicide rates are unusually high. Many defectors who fail to acclimatize even return to the North. We have no way of knowing how many have returned \u2014 and it\u2019s unclear what eventually happens to them \u2014 but Pyongyang has started using these \u201cdouble defectors\u201d for its propaganda.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Shin has been examined by doctors who believe he was subjected to torture and child labor, given the evidence of his scars and unnaturally bowed arms ."} +{"question": "Why are defectors like Mr. Shin tempted to obscure the truth?", "paragraph": "Mr. Shin has been examined by doctors who believe he was subjected to torture and child labor, given the evidence of his scars and unnaturally bowed arms. We shouldn\u2019t lose sight of that when discussing his lies. It\u2019s easy to see how Mr. Shin was tempted to obscure the truth. For defectors, sometimes doing so is the only way to survive. My own story starts with my escape in 1997, when I was 17. I did not crawl through a tunnel or over an electrified-wire fence, nor was I spirited in disguise across the demilitarized zone. I lived near the border with China, and one night I simply left home and walked across the iced-over river that separated the two countries. I was fortunate that my family had close relationships with some of the border guards, so I was able to cross without incident. At the time, I thought I would return home after a brief visit. I stayed in hiding for a while, learning Chinese. Eventually my Chinese became so fluent that I could pass for a local. Still, I was terrified of being captured or betrayed, so I created a false identity. Staying in China provided me with the opportunity to adjust to life outside of North Korea, and to gain a sense of perspective, most importantly, by learning that so much of what I had been taught about my country was a lie. In the early days, I considered going to South Korea, but I had internalized everything I had been told my whole life: South Korea was the enemy. I believed going there would be a betrayal of my country \u2014 and that my family might be punished as a result. Ultimately, I learned that I could go to South Korea by giving up my real identity, which would ensure my family back home would be safe. Once I got there, I faced the same challenges as the 27,000 other defectors who have now made it to the South. They struggle from a lack of education and job skills, discrimination, loneliness and emotional turmoil. Many drop out of school. Suicide rates are unusually high. Many defectors who fail to acclimatize even return to the North. We have no way of knowing how many have returned \u2014 and it\u2019s unclear what eventually happens to them \u2014 but Pyongyang has started using these \u201cdouble defectors\u201d for its propaganda.", "answer": "sometimes doing so is the only way to survive", "sentence": "For defectors, sometimes doing so is the only way to survive .", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Shin has been examined by doctors who believe he was subjected to torture and child labor, given the evidence of his scars and unnaturally bowed arms. We shouldn\u2019t lose sight of that when discussing his lies. It\u2019s easy to see how Mr. Shin was tempted to obscure the truth. For defectors, sometimes doing so is the only way to survive . My own story starts with my escape in 1997, when I was 17. I did not crawl through a tunnel or over an electrified-wire fence, nor was I spirited in disguise across the demilitarized zone. I lived near the border with China, and one night I simply left home and walked across the iced-over river that separated the two countries. I was fortunate that my family had close relationships with some of the border guards, so I was able to cross without incident. At the time, I thought I would return home after a brief visit. I stayed in hiding for a while, learning Chinese. Eventually my Chinese became so fluent that I could pass for a local. Still, I was terrified of being captured or betrayed, so I created a false identity. Staying in China provided me with the opportunity to adjust to life outside of North Korea, and to gain a sense of perspective, most importantly, by learning that so much of what I had been taught about my country was a lie. In the early days, I considered going to South Korea, but I had internalized everything I had been told my whole life: South Korea was the enemy. I believed going there would be a betrayal of my country \u2014 and that my family might be punished as a result. Ultimately, I learned that I could go to South Korea by giving up my real identity, which would ensure my family back home would be safe. Once I got there, I faced the same challenges as the 27,000 other defectors who have now made it to the South. They struggle from a lack of education and job skills, discrimination, loneliness and emotional turmoil. Many drop out of school. Suicide rates are unusually high. Many defectors who fail to acclimatize even return to the North. We have no way of knowing how many have returned \u2014 and it\u2019s unclear what eventually happens to them \u2014 but Pyongyang has started using these \u201cdouble defectors\u201d for its propaganda.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Shin has been examined by doctors who believe he was subjected to torture and child labor, given the evidence of his scars and unnaturally bowed arms. We shouldn\u2019t lose sight of that when discussing his lies. It\u2019s easy to see how Mr. Shin was tempted to obscure the truth. For defectors, sometimes doing so is the only way to survive . My own story starts with my escape in 1997, when I was 17. I did not crawl through a tunnel or over an electrified-wire fence, nor was I spirited in disguise across the demilitarized zone. I lived near the border with China, and one night I simply left home and walked across the iced-over river that separated the two countries. I was fortunate that my family had close relationships with some of the border guards, so I was able to cross without incident. At the time, I thought I would return home after a brief visit. I stayed in hiding for a while, learning Chinese. Eventually my Chinese became so fluent that I could pass for a local. Still, I was terrified of being captured or betrayed, so I created a false identity. Staying in China provided me with the opportunity to adjust to life outside of North Korea, and to gain a sense of perspective, most importantly, by learning that so much of what I had been taught about my country was a lie. In the early days, I considered going to South Korea, but I had internalized everything I had been told my whole life: South Korea was the enemy. I believed going there would be a betrayal of my country \u2014 and that my family might be punished as a result. Ultimately, I learned that I could go to South Korea by giving up my real identity, which would ensure my family back home would be safe. Once I got there, I faced the same challenges as the 27,000 other defectors who have now made it to the South. They struggle from a lack of education and job skills, discrimination, loneliness and emotional turmoil. Many drop out of school. Suicide rates are unusually high. Many defectors who fail to acclimatize even return to the North. We have no way of knowing how many have returned \u2014 and it\u2019s unclear what eventually happens to them \u2014 but Pyongyang has started using these \u201cdouble defectors\u201d for its propaganda.", "sentence_answer": "For defectors, sometimes doing so is the only way to survive ."} +{"question": "When did the author escape to China?", "paragraph": "Mr. Shin has been examined by doctors who believe he was subjected to torture and child labor, given the evidence of his scars and unnaturally bowed arms. We shouldn\u2019t lose sight of that when discussing his lies. It\u2019s easy to see how Mr. Shin was tempted to obscure the truth. For defectors, sometimes doing so is the only way to survive. My own story starts with my escape in 1997, when I was 17. I did not crawl through a tunnel or over an electrified-wire fence, nor was I spirited in disguise across the demilitarized zone. I lived near the border with China, and one night I simply left home and walked across the iced-over river that separated the two countries. I was fortunate that my family had close relationships with some of the border guards, so I was able to cross without incident. At the time, I thought I would return home after a brief visit. I stayed in hiding for a while, learning Chinese. Eventually my Chinese became so fluent that I could pass for a local. Still, I was terrified of being captured or betrayed, so I created a false identity. Staying in China provided me with the opportunity to adjust to life outside of North Korea, and to gain a sense of perspective, most importantly, by learning that so much of what I had been taught about my country was a lie. In the early days, I considered going to South Korea, but I had internalized everything I had been told my whole life: South Korea was the enemy. I believed going there would be a betrayal of my country \u2014 and that my family might be punished as a result. Ultimately, I learned that I could go to South Korea by giving up my real identity, which would ensure my family back home would be safe. Once I got there, I faced the same challenges as the 27,000 other defectors who have now made it to the South. They struggle from a lack of education and job skills, discrimination, loneliness and emotional turmoil. Many drop out of school. Suicide rates are unusually high. Many defectors who fail to acclimatize even return to the North. We have no way of knowing how many have returned \u2014 and it\u2019s unclear what eventually happens to them \u2014 but Pyongyang has started using these \u201cdouble defectors\u201d for its propaganda.", "answer": "in 1997", "sentence": "My own story starts with my escape in 1997 , when I was 17.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Shin has been examined by doctors who believe he was subjected to torture and child labor, given the evidence of his scars and unnaturally bowed arms. We shouldn\u2019t lose sight of that when discussing his lies. It\u2019s easy to see how Mr. Shin was tempted to obscure the truth. For defectors, sometimes doing so is the only way to survive. My own story starts with my escape in 1997 , when I was 17. I did not crawl through a tunnel or over an electrified-wire fence, nor was I spirited in disguise across the demilitarized zone. I lived near the border with China, and one night I simply left home and walked across the iced-over river that separated the two countries. I was fortunate that my family had close relationships with some of the border guards, so I was able to cross without incident. At the time, I thought I would return home after a brief visit. I stayed in hiding for a while, learning Chinese. Eventually my Chinese became so fluent that I could pass for a local. Still, I was terrified of being captured or betrayed, so I created a false identity. Staying in China provided me with the opportunity to adjust to life outside of North Korea, and to gain a sense of perspective, most importantly, by learning that so much of what I had been taught about my country was a lie. In the early days, I considered going to South Korea, but I had internalized everything I had been told my whole life: South Korea was the enemy. I believed going there would be a betrayal of my country \u2014 and that my family might be punished as a result. Ultimately, I learned that I could go to South Korea by giving up my real identity, which would ensure my family back home would be safe. Once I got there, I faced the same challenges as the 27,000 other defectors who have now made it to the South. They struggle from a lack of education and job skills, discrimination, loneliness and emotional turmoil. Many drop out of school. Suicide rates are unusually high. Many defectors who fail to acclimatize even return to the North. We have no way of knowing how many have returned \u2014 and it\u2019s unclear what eventually happens to them \u2014 but Pyongyang has started using these \u201cdouble defectors\u201d for its propaganda.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Shin has been examined by doctors who believe he was subjected to torture and child labor, given the evidence of his scars and unnaturally bowed arms. We shouldn\u2019t lose sight of that when discussing his lies. It\u2019s easy to see how Mr. Shin was tempted to obscure the truth. For defectors, sometimes doing so is the only way to survive. My own story starts with my escape in 1997 , when I was 17. I did not crawl through a tunnel or over an electrified-wire fence, nor was I spirited in disguise across the demilitarized zone. I lived near the border with China, and one night I simply left home and walked across the iced-over river that separated the two countries. I was fortunate that my family had close relationships with some of the border guards, so I was able to cross without incident. At the time, I thought I would return home after a brief visit. I stayed in hiding for a while, learning Chinese. Eventually my Chinese became so fluent that I could pass for a local. Still, I was terrified of being captured or betrayed, so I created a false identity. Staying in China provided me with the opportunity to adjust to life outside of North Korea, and to gain a sense of perspective, most importantly, by learning that so much of what I had been taught about my country was a lie. In the early days, I considered going to South Korea, but I had internalized everything I had been told my whole life: South Korea was the enemy. I believed going there would be a betrayal of my country \u2014 and that my family might be punished as a result. Ultimately, I learned that I could go to South Korea by giving up my real identity, which would ensure my family back home would be safe. Once I got there, I faced the same challenges as the 27,000 other defectors who have now made it to the South. They struggle from a lack of education and job skills, discrimination, loneliness and emotional turmoil. Many drop out of school. Suicide rates are unusually high. Many defectors who fail to acclimatize even return to the North. We have no way of knowing how many have returned \u2014 and it\u2019s unclear what eventually happens to them \u2014 but Pyongyang has started using these \u201cdouble defectors\u201d for its propaganda.", "sentence_answer": "My own story starts with my escape in 1997 , when I was 17."} +{"question": "How old was the author when she escaped North Korea?", "paragraph": "Mr. Shin has been examined by doctors who believe he was subjected to torture and child labor, given the evidence of his scars and unnaturally bowed arms. We shouldn\u2019t lose sight of that when discussing his lies. It\u2019s easy to see how Mr. Shin was tempted to obscure the truth. For defectors, sometimes doing so is the only way to survive. My own story starts with my escape in 1997, when I was 17. I did not crawl through a tunnel or over an electrified-wire fence, nor was I spirited in disguise across the demilitarized zone. I lived near the border with China, and one night I simply left home and walked across the iced-over river that separated the two countries. I was fortunate that my family had close relationships with some of the border guards, so I was able to cross without incident. At the time, I thought I would return home after a brief visit. I stayed in hiding for a while, learning Chinese. Eventually my Chinese became so fluent that I could pass for a local. Still, I was terrified of being captured or betrayed, so I created a false identity. Staying in China provided me with the opportunity to adjust to life outside of North Korea, and to gain a sense of perspective, most importantly, by learning that so much of what I had been taught about my country was a lie. In the early days, I considered going to South Korea, but I had internalized everything I had been told my whole life: South Korea was the enemy. I believed going there would be a betrayal of my country \u2014 and that my family might be punished as a result. Ultimately, I learned that I could go to South Korea by giving up my real identity, which would ensure my family back home would be safe. Once I got there, I faced the same challenges as the 27,000 other defectors who have now made it to the South. They struggle from a lack of education and job skills, discrimination, loneliness and emotional turmoil. Many drop out of school. Suicide rates are unusually high. Many defectors who fail to acclimatize even return to the North. We have no way of knowing how many have returned \u2014 and it\u2019s unclear what eventually happens to them \u2014 but Pyongyang has started using these \u201cdouble defectors\u201d for its propaganda.", "answer": "17", "sentence": "My own story starts with my escape in 1997, when I was 17 .", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Shin has been examined by doctors who believe he was subjected to torture and child labor, given the evidence of his scars and unnaturally bowed arms. We shouldn\u2019t lose sight of that when discussing his lies. It\u2019s easy to see how Mr. Shin was tempted to obscure the truth. For defectors, sometimes doing so is the only way to survive. My own story starts with my escape in 1997, when I was 17 . I did not crawl through a tunnel or over an electrified-wire fence, nor was I spirited in disguise across the demilitarized zone. I lived near the border with China, and one night I simply left home and walked across the iced-over river that separated the two countries. I was fortunate that my family had close relationships with some of the border guards, so I was able to cross without incident. At the time, I thought I would return home after a brief visit. I stayed in hiding for a while, learning Chinese. Eventually my Chinese became so fluent that I could pass for a local. Still, I was terrified of being captured or betrayed, so I created a false identity. Staying in China provided me with the opportunity to adjust to life outside of North Korea, and to gain a sense of perspective, most importantly, by learning that so much of what I had been taught about my country was a lie. In the early days, I considered going to South Korea, but I had internalized everything I had been told my whole life: South Korea was the enemy. I believed going there would be a betrayal of my country \u2014 and that my family might be punished as a result. Ultimately, I learned that I could go to South Korea by giving up my real identity, which would ensure my family back home would be safe. Once I got there, I faced the same challenges as the 27,000 other defectors who have now made it to the South. They struggle from a lack of education and job skills, discrimination, loneliness and emotional turmoil. Many drop out of school. Suicide rates are unusually high. Many defectors who fail to acclimatize even return to the North. We have no way of knowing how many have returned \u2014 and it\u2019s unclear what eventually happens to them \u2014 but Pyongyang has started using these \u201cdouble defectors\u201d for its propaganda.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Shin has been examined by doctors who believe he was subjected to torture and child labor, given the evidence of his scars and unnaturally bowed arms. We shouldn\u2019t lose sight of that when discussing his lies. It\u2019s easy to see how Mr. Shin was tempted to obscure the truth. For defectors, sometimes doing so is the only way to survive. My own story starts with my escape in 1997, when I was 17 . I did not crawl through a tunnel or over an electrified-wire fence, nor was I spirited in disguise across the demilitarized zone. I lived near the border with China, and one night I simply left home and walked across the iced-over river that separated the two countries. I was fortunate that my family had close relationships with some of the border guards, so I was able to cross without incident. At the time, I thought I would return home after a brief visit. I stayed in hiding for a while, learning Chinese. Eventually my Chinese became so fluent that I could pass for a local. Still, I was terrified of being captured or betrayed, so I created a false identity. Staying in China provided me with the opportunity to adjust to life outside of North Korea, and to gain a sense of perspective, most importantly, by learning that so much of what I had been taught about my country was a lie. In the early days, I considered going to South Korea, but I had internalized everything I had been told my whole life: South Korea was the enemy. I believed going there would be a betrayal of my country \u2014 and that my family might be punished as a result. Ultimately, I learned that I could go to South Korea by giving up my real identity, which would ensure my family back home would be safe. Once I got there, I faced the same challenges as the 27,000 other defectors who have now made it to the South. They struggle from a lack of education and job skills, discrimination, loneliness and emotional turmoil. Many drop out of school. Suicide rates are unusually high. Many defectors who fail to acclimatize even return to the North. We have no way of knowing how many have returned \u2014 and it\u2019s unclear what eventually happens to them \u2014 but Pyongyang has started using these \u201cdouble defectors\u201d for its propaganda.", "sentence_answer": "My own story starts with my escape in 1997, when I was 17 ."} +{"question": "How do some North Koreans find out some of the truth about South Korea?", "paragraph": "Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband, Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there. The double defectors play right into Pyongyang\u2019s new narrative. Many of them are featured in scripted press conferences in which they claim to have encountered a life of misery in the South. The double-defector propaganda has also given the regime a defense against human rights criticism from abroad: If North Korea really is so horrible, why do so many people keep returning? South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live. It also helps with our education and finding jobs. Despite this generous assistance, which some struggling South Koreans resent, we need more emotional support and ongoing counseling to help with the integration process.", "answer": "through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband", "sentence": "Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband , Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there.", "paragraph_sentence": " Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband , Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there. The double defectors play right into Pyongyang\u2019s new narrative. Many of them are featured in scripted press conferences in which they claim to have encountered a life of misery in the South. The double-defector propaganda has also given the regime a defense against human rights criticism from abroad: If North Korea really is so horrible, why do so many people keep returning? South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live. It also helps with our education and finding jobs. Despite this generous assistance, which some struggling South Koreans resent, we need more emotional support and ongoing counseling to help with the integration process.", "paragraph_answer": "Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband , Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there. The double defectors play right into Pyongyang\u2019s new narrative. Many of them are featured in scripted press conferences in which they claim to have encountered a life of misery in the South. The double-defector propaganda has also given the regime a defense against human rights criticism from abroad: If North Korea really is so horrible, why do so many people keep returning? South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live. It also helps with our education and finding jobs. Despite this generous assistance, which some struggling South Koreans resent, we need more emotional support and ongoing counseling to help with the integration process.", "sentence_answer": "Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband , Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there."} +{"question": "What do double defectors featured in North Korean scripted press conferences claim?", "paragraph": "Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband, Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there. The double defectors play right into Pyongyang\u2019s new narrative. Many of them are featured in scripted press conferences in which they claim to have encountered a life of misery in the South. The double-defector propaganda has also given the regime a defense against human rights criticism from abroad: If North Korea really is so horrible, why do so many people keep returning? South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live. It also helps with our education and finding jobs. Despite this generous assistance, which some struggling South Koreans resent, we need more emotional support and ongoing counseling to help with the integration process.", "answer": "to have encountered a life of misery in the South", "sentence": "Many of them are featured in scripted press conferences in which they claim to have encountered a life of misery in the South .", "paragraph_sentence": "Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband, Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there. The double defectors play right into Pyongyang\u2019s new narrative. Many of them are featured in scripted press conferences in which they claim to have encountered a life of misery in the South . The double-defector propaganda has also given the regime a defense against human rights criticism from abroad: If North Korea really is so horrible, why do so many people keep returning? South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live. It also helps with our education and finding jobs. Despite this generous assistance, which some struggling South Koreans resent, we need more emotional support and ongoing counseling to help with the integration process.", "paragraph_answer": "Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband, Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there. The double defectors play right into Pyongyang\u2019s new narrative. Many of them are featured in scripted press conferences in which they claim to have encountered a life of misery in the South . The double-defector propaganda has also given the regime a defense against human rights criticism from abroad: If North Korea really is so horrible, why do so many people keep returning? South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live. It also helps with our education and finding jobs. Despite this generous assistance, which some struggling South Koreans resent, we need more emotional support and ongoing counseling to help with the integration process.", "sentence_answer": "Many of them are featured in scripted press conferences in which they claim to have encountered a life of misery in the South ."} +{"question": "Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies between North and South Korea by claiming what in their propaganda against the South?", "paragraph": "Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband, Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there. The double defectors play right into Pyongyang\u2019s new narrative. Many of them are featured in scripted press conferences in which they claim to have encountered a life of misery in the South. The double-defector propaganda has also given the regime a defense against human rights criticism from abroad: If North Korea really is so horrible, why do so many people keep returning? South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live. It also helps with our education and finding jobs. Despite this generous assistance, which some struggling South Koreans resent, we need more emotional support and ongoing counseling to help with the integration process.", "answer": "Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there", "sentence": "Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband, Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there .", "paragraph_sentence": " Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband, Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there . The double defectors play right into Pyongyang\u2019s new narrative. Many of them are featured in scripted press conferences in which they claim to have encountered a life of misery in the South. The double-defector propaganda has also given the regime a defense against human rights criticism from abroad: If North Korea really is so horrible, why do so many people keep returning? South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live. It also helps with our education and finding jobs. Despite this generous assistance, which some struggling South Koreans resent, we need more emotional support and ongoing counseling to help with the integration process.", "paragraph_answer": "Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband, Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there . The double defectors play right into Pyongyang\u2019s new narrative. Many of them are featured in scripted press conferences in which they claim to have encountered a life of misery in the South. The double-defector propaganda has also given the regime a defense against human rights criticism from abroad: If North Korea really is so horrible, why do so many people keep returning? South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live. It also helps with our education and finding jobs. Despite this generous assistance, which some struggling South Koreans resent, we need more emotional support and ongoing counseling to help with the integration process.", "sentence_answer": "Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband, Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there ."} +{"question": "What has North Korea gained from double-defector propaganda?", "paragraph": "Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband, Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there. The double defectors play right into Pyongyang\u2019s new narrative. Many of them are featured in scripted press conferences in which they claim to have encountered a life of misery in the South. The double-defector propaganda has also given the regime a defense against human rights criticism from abroad: If North Korea really is so horrible, why do so many people keep returning? South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live. It also helps with our education and finding jobs. Despite this generous assistance, which some struggling South Koreans resent, we need more emotional support and ongoing counseling to help with the integration process.", "answer": "a defense against human rights criticism from abroad", "sentence": "The double-defector propaganda has also given the regime a defense against human rights criticism from abroad : If North Korea really is so horrible, why do so many people keep returning?", "paragraph_sentence": "Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband, Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there. The double defectors play right into Pyongyang\u2019s new narrative. Many of them are featured in scripted press conferences in which they claim to have encountered a life of misery in the South. The double-defector propaganda has also given the regime a defense against human rights criticism from abroad : If North Korea really is so horrible, why do so many people keep returning? South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live. It also helps with our education and finding jobs. Despite this generous assistance, which some struggling South Koreans resent, we need more emotional support and ongoing counseling to help with the integration process.", "paragraph_answer": "Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband, Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there. The double defectors play right into Pyongyang\u2019s new narrative. Many of them are featured in scripted press conferences in which they claim to have encountered a life of misery in the South. The double-defector propaganda has also given the regime a defense against human rights criticism from abroad : If North Korea really is so horrible, why do so many people keep returning? South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live. It also helps with our education and finding jobs. Despite this generous assistance, which some struggling South Koreans resent, we need more emotional support and ongoing counseling to help with the integration process.", "sentence_answer": "The double-defector propaganda has also given the regime a defense against human rights criticism from abroad : If North Korea really is so horrible, why do so many people keep returning?"} +{"question": "What are two things South Korea provides North Korean defectors with?", "paragraph": "Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband, Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there. The double defectors play right into Pyongyang\u2019s new narrative. Many of them are featured in scripted press conferences in which they claim to have encountered a life of misery in the South. The double-defector propaganda has also given the regime a defense against human rights criticism from abroad: If North Korea really is so horrible, why do so many people keep returning? South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live. It also helps with our education and finding jobs. Despite this generous assistance, which some struggling South Koreans resent, we need more emotional support and ongoing counseling to help with the integration process.", "answer": "living expenses and a place to live", "sentence": "South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live .", "paragraph_sentence": "Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband, Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there. The double defectors play right into Pyongyang\u2019s new narrative. Many of them are featured in scripted press conferences in which they claim to have encountered a life of misery in the South. The double-defector propaganda has also given the regime a defense against human rights criticism from abroad: If North Korea really is so horrible, why do so many people keep returning? South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live . It also helps with our education and finding jobs. Despite this generous assistance, which some struggling South Koreans resent, we need more emotional support and ongoing counseling to help with the integration process.", "paragraph_answer": "Historically, the North\u2019s propagandists vilified the South and its economy, but now that more Northerners know some of the truth through illegally smuggled South Korean television shows and other contraband, Pyongyang has redefined the difference in economies in relative terms: Though South Korea may be rich, any North Koreans foolish enough to chase Southern dreams will only find a life of hardship and poverty there. The double defectors play right into Pyongyang\u2019s new narrative. Many of them are featured in scripted press conferences in which they claim to have encountered a life of misery in the South. The double-defector propaganda has also given the regime a defense against human rights criticism from abroad: If North Korea really is so horrible, why do so many people keep returning? South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live . It also helps with our education and finding jobs. Despite this generous assistance, which some struggling South Koreans resent, we need more emotional support and ongoing counseling to help with the integration process.", "sentence_answer": "South Korea already provides a lot of support for defectors, including living expenses and a place to live ."} +{"question": "What is the lawsuit against the National Security Agency about ?", "paragraph": "SAN FRANCISCO \u2014 TODAY, we\u2019re filing a lawsuit against the National Security Agency to protect the rights of the 500 million people who use Wikipedia every month. We\u2019re doing so because a fundamental pillar of democracy is at stake: the free exchange of knowledge and ideas. Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy, as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association. We also argue that this agency activity exceeds the authority granted by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that Congress amended in 2008.", "answer": "to protect the rights of the 500 million people who use Wikipedia every month", "sentence": "SAN FRANCISCO \u2014 TODAY, we\u2019re filing a lawsuit against the National Security Agency to protect the rights of the 500 million people who use Wikipedia every month .", "paragraph_sentence": " SAN FRANCISCO \u2014 TODAY, we\u2019re filing a lawsuit against the National Security Agency to protect the rights of the 500 million people who use Wikipedia every month . We\u2019re doing so because a fundamental pillar of democracy is at stake: the free exchange of knowledge and ideas. Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy, as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association. We also argue that this agency activity exceeds the authority granted by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that Congress amended in 2008.", "paragraph_answer": "SAN FRANCISCO \u2014 TODAY, we\u2019re filing a lawsuit against the National Security Agency to protect the rights of the 500 million people who use Wikipedia every month . We\u2019re doing so because a fundamental pillar of democracy is at stake: the free exchange of knowledge and ideas. Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy, as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association. We also argue that this agency activity exceeds the authority granted by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that Congress amended in 2008.", "sentence_answer": "SAN FRANCISCO \u2014 TODAY, we\u2019re filing a lawsuit against the National Security Agency to protect the rights of the 500 million people who use Wikipedia every month ."} +{"question": "What is \"upstream surveillance\"?", "paragraph": "SAN FRANCISCO \u2014 TODAY, we\u2019re filing a lawsuit against the National Security Agency to protect the rights of the 500 million people who use Wikipedia every month. We\u2019re doing so because a fundamental pillar of democracy is at stake: the free exchange of knowledge and ideas. Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy, as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association. We also argue that this agency activity exceeds the authority granted by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that Congress amended in 2008.", "answer": "N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil", "sentence": "Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy, as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association.", "paragraph_sentence": "SAN FRANCISCO \u2014 TODAY, we\u2019re filing a lawsuit against the National Security Agency to protect the rights of the 500 million people who use Wikipedia every month. We\u2019re doing so because a fundamental pillar of democracy is at stake: the free exchange of knowledge and ideas. Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy, as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association. We also argue that this agency activity exceeds the authority granted by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that Congress amended in 2008.", "paragraph_answer": "SAN FRANCISCO \u2014 TODAY, we\u2019re filing a lawsuit against the National Security Agency to protect the rights of the 500 million people who use Wikipedia every month. We\u2019re doing so because a fundamental pillar of democracy is at stake: the free exchange of knowledge and ideas. Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy, as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association. We also argue that this agency activity exceeds the authority granted by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that Congress amended in 2008.", "sentence_answer": "Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy, as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association."} +{"question": "What fundamental pillar of democracy is at stack ??", "paragraph": "SAN FRANCISCO \u2014 TODAY, we\u2019re filing a lawsuit against the National Security Agency to protect the rights of the 500 million people who use Wikipedia every month. We\u2019re doing so because a fundamental pillar of democracy is at stake: the free exchange of knowledge and ideas. Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy, as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association. We also argue that this agency activity exceeds the authority granted by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that Congress amended in 2008.", "answer": "the free exchange of knowledge and ideas", "sentence": "We\u2019re doing so because a fundamental pillar of democracy is at stake: the free exchange of knowledge and ideas .", "paragraph_sentence": "SAN FRANCISCO \u2014 TODAY, we\u2019re filing a lawsuit against the National Security Agency to protect the rights of the 500 million people who use Wikipedia every month. We\u2019re doing so because a fundamental pillar of democracy is at stake: the free exchange of knowledge and ideas . Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy, as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association. We also argue that this agency activity exceeds the authority granted by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that Congress amended in 2008.", "paragraph_answer": "SAN FRANCISCO \u2014 TODAY, we\u2019re filing a lawsuit against the National Security Agency to protect the rights of the 500 million people who use Wikipedia every month. We\u2019re doing so because a fundamental pillar of democracy is at stake: the free exchange of knowledge and ideas . Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy, as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association. We also argue that this agency activity exceeds the authority granted by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that Congress amended in 2008.", "sentence_answer": "We\u2019re doing so because a fundamental pillar of democracy is at stake: the free exchange of knowledge and ideas ."} +{"question": "What does the Fourth Amendment protect ?", "paragraph": "SAN FRANCISCO \u2014 TODAY, we\u2019re filing a lawsuit against the National Security Agency to protect the rights of the 500 million people who use Wikipedia every month. We\u2019re doing so because a fundamental pillar of democracy is at stake: the free exchange of knowledge and ideas. Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy, as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association. We also argue that this agency activity exceeds the authority granted by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that Congress amended in 2008.", "answer": "right to privacy", "sentence": "Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy , as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association.", "paragraph_sentence": "SAN FRANCISCO \u2014 TODAY, we\u2019re filing a lawsuit against the National Security Agency to protect the rights of the 500 million people who use Wikipedia every month. We\u2019re doing so because a fundamental pillar of democracy is at stake: the free exchange of knowledge and ideas. Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy , as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association. We also argue that this agency activity exceeds the authority granted by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that Congress amended in 2008.", "paragraph_answer": "SAN FRANCISCO \u2014 TODAY, we\u2019re filing a lawsuit against the National Security Agency to protect the rights of the 500 million people who use Wikipedia every month. We\u2019re doing so because a fundamental pillar of democracy is at stake: the free exchange of knowledge and ideas. Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy , as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association. We also argue that this agency activity exceeds the authority granted by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that Congress amended in 2008.", "sentence_answer": "Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy , as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association."} +{"question": "What does the First Amendment protect ?", "paragraph": "SAN FRANCISCO \u2014 TODAY, we\u2019re filing a lawsuit against the National Security Agency to protect the rights of the 500 million people who use Wikipedia every month. We\u2019re doing so because a fundamental pillar of democracy is at stake: the free exchange of knowledge and ideas. Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy, as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association. We also argue that this agency activity exceeds the authority granted by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that Congress amended in 2008.", "answer": "freedoms of expression and association", "sentence": "Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy, as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association .", "paragraph_sentence": "SAN FRANCISCO \u2014 TODAY, we\u2019re filing a lawsuit against the National Security Agency to protect the rights of the 500 million people who use Wikipedia every month. We\u2019re doing so because a fundamental pillar of democracy is at stake: the free exchange of knowledge and ideas. Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy, as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association . We also argue that this agency activity exceeds the authority granted by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that Congress amended in 2008.", "paragraph_answer": "SAN FRANCISCO \u2014 TODAY, we\u2019re filing a lawsuit against the National Security Agency to protect the rights of the 500 million people who use Wikipedia every month. We\u2019re doing so because a fundamental pillar of democracy is at stake: the free exchange of knowledge and ideas. Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy, as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association . We also argue that this agency activity exceeds the authority granted by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that Congress amended in 2008.", "sentence_answer": "Our lawsuit says that the N.S.A.\u2019s mass surveillance of Internet traffic on American soil \u2014 often called \u201cupstream\u201d surveillance \u2014 violates the Fourth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy, as well as the First Amendment, which protects the freedoms of expression and association ."} +{"question": "How do most people search and read Wikipedia ?", "paragraph": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously, since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages. Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing.", "answer": "anonymously", "sentence": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously , since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages.", "paragraph_sentence": " Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously , since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages. Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing.", "paragraph_answer": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously , since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages. Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing.", "sentence_answer": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously , since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages."} +{"question": "How many articles are in Wikipedia ?", "paragraph": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously, since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages. Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing.", "answer": "tens of millions", "sentence": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously, since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages.", "paragraph_sentence": " Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously, since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages. Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing.", "paragraph_answer": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously, since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages. Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing.", "sentence_answer": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously, since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages."} +{"question": "How many languages are the articles in Wikipedia written in ?", "paragraph": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously, since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages. Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing.", "answer": "hundreds", "sentence": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously, since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages.", "paragraph_sentence": " Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously, since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages. Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing.", "paragraph_answer": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously, since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages. Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing.", "sentence_answer": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously, since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages."} +{"question": "Every month, how many volunteers contribute to writing articles in Wikipedia ?", "paragraph": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously, since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages. Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing.", "answer": "at least 75,000", "sentence": "Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing.", "paragraph_sentence": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously, since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages. Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing. ", "paragraph_answer": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously, since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages. Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing.", "sentence_answer": "Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing."} +{"question": "Where do the volunteers writing articles in Wikipedia come from ?", "paragraph": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously, since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages. Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing.", "answer": "United States and around the world", "sentence": "Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing.", "paragraph_sentence": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously, since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages. Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing. ", "paragraph_answer": "Most people search and read Wikipedia anonymously, since you don\u2019t need an account to view its tens of millions of articles in hundreds of languages. Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing.", "sentence_answer": "Every month, at least 75,000 volunteers in the United States and around the world contribute their time and passion to writing those articles and keeping the site going \u2014 and growing."} +{"question": "Which government is monitoring what the volunteers read and write ?", "paragraph": "These volunteers should be able to do their work without having to worry that the United States government is monitoring what they read and write. Unfortunately, their anonymity is far from certain because, using upstream surveillance, the N.S.A. intercepts and searches virtually all of the international text-based traffic that flows across the Internet \u201cbackbone\u201d inside the United States. This is the network of fiber-optic cables and junctions that connect Wikipedia with its global community of readers and editors.", "answer": "United States government", "sentence": "the United States government is monitoring what they read and write.", "paragraph_sentence": "These volunteers should be able to do their work without having to worry that the United States government is monitoring what they read and write. Unfortunately, their anonymity is far from certain because, using upstream surveillance, the N.S.A. intercepts and searches virtually all of the international text-based traffic that flows across the Internet \u201cbackbone\u201d inside the United States. This is the network of fiber-optic cables and junctions that connect Wikipedia with its global community of readers and editors.", "paragraph_answer": "These volunteers should be able to do their work without having to worry that the United States government is monitoring what they read and write. Unfortunately, their anonymity is far from certain because, using upstream surveillance, the N.S.A. intercepts and searches virtually all of the international text-based traffic that flows across the Internet \u201cbackbone\u201d inside the United States. This is the network of fiber-optic cables and junctions that connect Wikipedia with its global community of readers and editors.", "sentence_answer": "the United States government is monitoring what they read and write."} +{"question": "Is the anonymity of the volunteers certain ?", "paragraph": "These volunteers should be able to do their work without having to worry that the United States government is monitoring what they read and write. Unfortunately, their anonymity is far from certain because, using upstream surveillance, the N.S.A. intercepts and searches virtually all of the international text-based traffic that flows across the Internet \u201cbackbone\u201d inside the United States. This is the network of fiber-optic cables and junctions that connect Wikipedia with its global community of readers and editors.", "answer": "far from certain", "sentence": "Unfortunately, their anonymity is far from certain because, using upstream surveillance, the N.S.A. intercepts and searches virtually all of the international text-based traffic that flows across the Internet \u201cbackbone\u201d inside the United States.", "paragraph_sentence": "These volunteers should be able to do their work without having to worry that the United States government is monitoring what they read and write. Unfortunately, their anonymity is far from certain because, using upstream surveillance, the N.S.A. intercepts and searches virtually all of the international text-based traffic that flows across the Internet \u201cbackbone\u201d inside the United States. This is the network of fiber-optic cables and junctions that connect Wikipedia with its global community of readers and editors.", "paragraph_answer": "These volunteers should be able to do their work without having to worry that the United States government is monitoring what they read and write. Unfortunately, their anonymity is far from certain because, using upstream surveillance, the N.S.A. intercepts and searches virtually all of the international text-based traffic that flows across the Internet \u201cbackbone\u201d inside the United States. This is the network of fiber-optic cables and junctions that connect Wikipedia with its global community of readers and editors.", "sentence_answer": "Unfortunately, their anonymity is far from certain because, using upstream surveillance, the N.S.A. intercepts and searches virtually all of the international text-based traffic that flows across the Internet \u201cbackbone\u201d inside the United States."} +{"question": "What kind of surveillance does the N.S.A. use?", "paragraph": "These volunteers should be able to do their work without having to worry that the United States government is monitoring what they read and write. Unfortunately, their anonymity is far from certain because, using upstream surveillance, the N.S.A. intercepts and searches virtually all of the international text-based traffic that flows across the Internet \u201cbackbone\u201d inside the United States. This is the network of fiber-optic cables and junctions that connect Wikipedia with its global community of readers and editors.", "answer": "upstream surveillance", "sentence": "Unfortunately, their anonymity is far from certain because, using upstream surveillance , the N.S.A. intercepts and searches virtually all of the international text-based traffic that flows across the Internet \u201cbackbone\u201d inside the United States.", "paragraph_sentence": "These volunteers should be able to do their work without having to worry that the United States government is monitoring what they read and write. Unfortunately, their anonymity is far from certain because, using upstream surveillance , the N.S.A. intercepts and searches virtually all of the international text-based traffic that flows across the Internet \u201cbackbone\u201d inside the United States. This is the network of fiber-optic cables and junctions that connect Wikipedia with its global community of readers and editors.", "paragraph_answer": "These volunteers should be able to do their work without having to worry that the United States government is monitoring what they read and write. Unfortunately, their anonymity is far from certain because, using upstream surveillance , the N.S.A. intercepts and searches virtually all of the international text-based traffic that flows across the Internet \u201cbackbone\u201d inside the United States. This is the network of fiber-optic cables and junctions that connect Wikipedia with its global community of readers and editors.", "sentence_answer": "Unfortunately, their anonymity is far from certain because, using upstream surveillance , the N.S.A. intercepts and searches virtually all of the international text-based traffic that flows across the Internet \u201cbackbone\u201d inside the United States."} +{"question": "What network connects Wikipedia with its global community of readers and editors ?", "paragraph": "These volunteers should be able to do their work without having to worry that the United States government is monitoring what they read and write. Unfortunately, their anonymity is far from certain because, using upstream surveillance, the N.S.A. intercepts and searches virtually all of the international text-based traffic that flows across the Internet \u201cbackbone\u201d inside the United States. This is the network of fiber-optic cables and junctions that connect Wikipedia with its global community of readers and editors.", "answer": "fiber-optic cables and junctions", "sentence": "This is the network of fiber-optic cables and junctions that connect Wikipedia with its global community of readers and editors.", "paragraph_sentence": "These volunteers should be able to do their work without having to worry that the United States government is monitoring what they read and write. Unfortunately, their anonymity is far from certain because, using upstream surveillance, the N.S.A. intercepts and searches virtually all of the international text-based traffic that flows across the Internet \u201cbackbone\u201d inside the United States. This is the network of fiber-optic cables and junctions that connect Wikipedia with its global community of readers and editors. ", "paragraph_answer": "These volunteers should be able to do their work without having to worry that the United States government is monitoring what they read and write. Unfortunately, their anonymity is far from certain because, using upstream surveillance, the N.S.A. intercepts and searches virtually all of the international text-based traffic that flows across the Internet \u201cbackbone\u201d inside the United States. This is the network of fiber-optic cables and junctions that connect Wikipedia with its global community of readers and editors.", "sentence_answer": "This is the network of fiber-optic cables and junctions that connect Wikipedia with its global community of readers and editors."} +{"question": "Who make up the global community of Wikipedia ?", "paragraph": "These volunteers should be able to do their work without having to worry that the United States government is monitoring what they read and write. Unfortunately, their anonymity is far from certain because, using upstream surveillance, the N.S.A. intercepts and searches virtually all of the international text-based traffic that flows across the Internet \u201cbackbone\u201d inside the United States. This is the network of fiber-optic cables and junctions that connect Wikipedia with its global community of readers and editors.", "answer": "readers and editors", "sentence": "This is the network of fiber-optic cables and junctions that connect Wikipedia with its global community of readers and editors .", "paragraph_sentence": "These volunteers should be able to do their work without having to worry that the United States government is monitoring what they read and write. Unfortunately, their anonymity is far from certain because, using upstream surveillance, the N.S.A. intercepts and searches virtually all of the international text-based traffic that flows across the Internet \u201cbackbone\u201d inside the United States. This is the network of fiber-optic cables and junctions that connect Wikipedia with its global community of readers and editors . ", "paragraph_answer": "These volunteers should be able to do their work without having to worry that the United States government is monitoring what they read and write. Unfortunately, their anonymity is far from certain because, using upstream surveillance, the N.S.A. intercepts and searches virtually all of the international text-based traffic that flows across the Internet \u201cbackbone\u201d inside the United States. This is the network of fiber-optic cables and junctions that connect Wikipedia with its global community of readers and editors .", "sentence_answer": "This is the network of fiber-optic cables and junctions that connect Wikipedia with its global community of readers and editors ."} +{"question": "Who was the Pope during the author's childhood?", "paragraph": "Watching the nation come to a screeching halt over Pope Francis\u2019 visit, I had a flashback to my childhood in Cincinnati. One day I saw a picture of then-Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked! I had no idea that anybody in Ohio outside my immediate neighborhood knew who he was. In our Catholic school, the nuns stressed our isolation, and they kept prepping us to be ready to die for our faith at any moment. Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns. (At the time, I just knew virgins were women who hadn\u2019t married, and I had a vision of throngs of young ladies being pursued by barbarians waving engagement rings.)", "answer": "Pope Pius XII", "sentence": "One day I saw a picture of then- Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked!", "paragraph_sentence": "Watching the nation come to a screeching halt over Pope Francis\u2019 visit, I had a flashback to my childhood in Cincinnati. One day I saw a picture of then- Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked! I had no idea that anybody in Ohio outside my immediate neighborhood knew who he was. In our Catholic school, the nuns stressed our isolation, and they kept prepping us to be ready to die for our faith at any moment. Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns. (At the time, I just knew virgins were women who hadn\u2019t married, and I had a vision of throngs of young ladies being pursued by barbarians waving engagement rings.)", "paragraph_answer": "Watching the nation come to a screeching halt over Pope Francis\u2019 visit, I had a flashback to my childhood in Cincinnati. One day I saw a picture of then- Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked! I had no idea that anybody in Ohio outside my immediate neighborhood knew who he was. In our Catholic school, the nuns stressed our isolation, and they kept prepping us to be ready to die for our faith at any moment. Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns. (At the time, I just knew virgins were women who hadn\u2019t married, and I had a vision of throngs of young ladies being pursued by barbarians waving engagement rings.)", "sentence_answer": "One day I saw a picture of then- Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked!"} +{"question": "How many virgins did St. Ursula go on a pilgrimage with?", "paragraph": "Watching the nation come to a screeching halt over Pope Francis\u2019 visit, I had a flashback to my childhood in Cincinnati. One day I saw a picture of then-Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked! I had no idea that anybody in Ohio outside my immediate neighborhood knew who he was. In our Catholic school, the nuns stressed our isolation, and they kept prepping us to be ready to die for our faith at any moment. Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns. (At the time, I just knew virgins were women who hadn\u2019t married, and I had a vision of throngs of young ladies being pursued by barbarians waving engagement rings.)", "answer": "11,000", "sentence": "Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns.", "paragraph_sentence": "Watching the nation come to a screeching halt over Pope Francis\u2019 visit, I had a flashback to my childhood in Cincinnati. One day I saw a picture of then-Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked! I had no idea that anybody in Ohio outside my immediate neighborhood knew who he was. In our Catholic school, the nuns stressed our isolation, and they kept prepping us to be ready to die for our faith at any moment. Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns. (At the time, I just knew virgins were women who hadn\u2019t married, and I had a vision of throngs of young ladies being pursued by barbarians waving engagement rings.)", "paragraph_answer": "Watching the nation come to a screeching halt over Pope Francis\u2019 visit, I had a flashback to my childhood in Cincinnati. One day I saw a picture of then-Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked! I had no idea that anybody in Ohio outside my immediate neighborhood knew who he was. In our Catholic school, the nuns stressed our isolation, and they kept prepping us to be ready to die for our faith at any moment. Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns. (At the time, I just knew virgins were women who hadn\u2019t married, and I had a vision of throngs of young ladies being pursued by barbarians waving engagement rings.)", "sentence_answer": "Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns."} +{"question": "What alternative did the 11,000 virgins forgo in choosing to become martyrs?", "paragraph": "Watching the nation come to a screeching halt over Pope Francis\u2019 visit, I had a flashback to my childhood in Cincinnati. One day I saw a picture of then-Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked! I had no idea that anybody in Ohio outside my immediate neighborhood knew who he was. In our Catholic school, the nuns stressed our isolation, and they kept prepping us to be ready to die for our faith at any moment. Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns. (At the time, I just knew virgins were women who hadn\u2019t married, and I had a vision of throngs of young ladies being pursued by barbarians waving engagement rings.)", "answer": "surrender their purity to infidel Huns", "sentence": "Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns .", "paragraph_sentence": "Watching the nation come to a screeching halt over Pope Francis\u2019 visit, I had a flashback to my childhood in Cincinnati. One day I saw a picture of then-Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked! I had no idea that anybody in Ohio outside my immediate neighborhood knew who he was. In our Catholic school, the nuns stressed our isolation, and they kept prepping us to be ready to die for our faith at any moment. Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns . (At the time, I just knew virgins were women who hadn\u2019t married, and I had a vision of throngs of young ladies being pursued by barbarians waving engagement rings.)", "paragraph_answer": "Watching the nation come to a screeching halt over Pope Francis\u2019 visit, I had a flashback to my childhood in Cincinnati. One day I saw a picture of then-Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked! I had no idea that anybody in Ohio outside my immediate neighborhood knew who he was. In our Catholic school, the nuns stressed our isolation, and they kept prepping us to be ready to die for our faith at any moment. Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns . (At the time, I just knew virgins were women who hadn\u2019t married, and I had a vision of throngs of young ladies being pursued by barbarians waving engagement rings.)", "sentence_answer": "Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns ."} +{"question": "What were the nuns at the Catholic school said to be grooming the students for?", "paragraph": "Watching the nation come to a screeching halt over Pope Francis\u2019 visit, I had a flashback to my childhood in Cincinnati. One day I saw a picture of then-Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked! I had no idea that anybody in Ohio outside my immediate neighborhood knew who he was. In our Catholic school, the nuns stressed our isolation, and they kept prepping us to be ready to die for our faith at any moment. Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns. (At the time, I just knew virgins were women who hadn\u2019t married, and I had a vision of throngs of young ladies being pursued by barbarians waving engagement rings.)", "answer": "to be ready to die for our faith at any moment", "sentence": "In our Catholic school, the nuns stressed our isolation, and they kept prepping us to be ready to die for our faith at any moment .", "paragraph_sentence": "Watching the nation come to a screeching halt over Pope Francis\u2019 visit, I had a flashback to my childhood in Cincinnati. One day I saw a picture of then-Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked! I had no idea that anybody in Ohio outside my immediate neighborhood knew who he was. In our Catholic school, the nuns stressed our isolation, and they kept prepping us to be ready to die for our faith at any moment . Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns. (At the time, I just knew virgins were women who hadn\u2019t married, and I had a vision of throngs of young ladies being pursued by barbarians waving engagement rings.)", "paragraph_answer": "Watching the nation come to a screeching halt over Pope Francis\u2019 visit, I had a flashback to my childhood in Cincinnati. One day I saw a picture of then-Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked! I had no idea that anybody in Ohio outside my immediate neighborhood knew who he was. In our Catholic school, the nuns stressed our isolation, and they kept prepping us to be ready to die for our faith at any moment . Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns. (At the time, I just knew virgins were women who hadn\u2019t married, and I had a vision of throngs of young ladies being pursued by barbarians waving engagement rings.)", "sentence_answer": "In our Catholic school, the nuns stressed our isolation, and they kept prepping us to be ready to die for our faith at any moment ."} +{"question": "Where did the author see an image of Pope Pius X II?", "paragraph": "Watching the nation come to a screeching halt over Pope Francis\u2019 visit, I had a flashback to my childhood in Cincinnati. One day I saw a picture of then-Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked! I had no idea that anybody in Ohio outside my immediate neighborhood knew who he was. In our Catholic school, the nuns stressed our isolation, and they kept prepping us to be ready to die for our faith at any moment. Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns. (At the time, I just knew virgins were women who hadn\u2019t married, and I had a vision of throngs of young ladies being pursued by barbarians waving engagement rings.)", "answer": "on the front page of the evening paper", "sentence": "One day I saw a picture of then-Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked!", "paragraph_sentence": "Watching the nation come to a screeching halt over Pope Francis\u2019 visit, I had a flashback to my childhood in Cincinnati. One day I saw a picture of then-Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked! I had no idea that anybody in Ohio outside my immediate neighborhood knew who he was. In our Catholic school, the nuns stressed our isolation, and they kept prepping us to be ready to die for our faith at any moment. Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns. (At the time, I just knew virgins were women who hadn\u2019t married, and I had a vision of throngs of young ladies being pursued by barbarians waving engagement rings.)", "paragraph_answer": "Watching the nation come to a screeching halt over Pope Francis\u2019 visit, I had a flashback to my childhood in Cincinnati. One day I saw a picture of then-Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked! I had no idea that anybody in Ohio outside my immediate neighborhood knew who he was. In our Catholic school, the nuns stressed our isolation, and they kept prepping us to be ready to die for our faith at any moment. Like St. Ursula, who was on a pilgrimage with 11,000 virgins, all of whom instantly chose martyrdom rather than surrender their purity to infidel Huns. (At the time, I just knew virgins were women who hadn\u2019t married, and I had a vision of throngs of young ladies being pursued by barbarians waving engagement rings.)", "sentence_answer": "One day I saw a picture of then-Pope Pius XII on the front page of the evening paper and I was shocked \u2014 Shocked!"} +{"question": "In spite of his humility, what does Pope Francis acknowledge about himself?", "paragraph": "I spent a lot of time trying to figure out how Tarcisius might have gotten away unscathed. Maybe by pretending to have a sore throat? It seemed important to identify the best strategy, because some modern-day version of the Huns or pagan Romans could arrive at any minute. Catholicism was, as I learned after the Pius XII incident, the largest faith in my city. Many of our teachers were probably only a generation away from being picked-on immigrants, and maybe they brought their sense of paranoia with them to the classrooms. That\u2019s understandable, but being both the powerful majority and the persecuted minority is like having your cake and eating it, and then taking over the bakery and bolting the front door. This brings us back to Pope Francis, a humble man who accepts that he\u2019s very powerful. He may have a little car and a modest home, but when he looks out at the world, his gaze isn\u2019t defensive. He wants Catholicism to thrive \u2014 on a planet without global warming. He knows there are places where Catholics are suffering terribly for their faith, but when he looks at an embattled flock, he also sees Muslim immigrants who need Christian countries to open their borders.", "answer": "that he\u2019s very powerful", "sentence": "This brings us back to Pope Francis, a humble man who accepts that he\u2019s very powerful .", "paragraph_sentence": "I spent a lot of time trying to figure out how Tarcisius might have gotten away unscathed. Maybe by pretending to have a sore throat? It seemed important to identify the best strategy, because some modern-day version of the Huns or pagan Romans could arrive at any minute. Catholicism was, as I learned after the Pius XII incident, the largest faith in my city. Many of our teachers were probably only a generation away from being picked-on immigrants, and maybe they brought their sense of paranoia with them to the classrooms. That\u2019s understandable, but being both the powerful majority and the persecuted minority is like having your cake and eating it, and then taking over the bakery and bolting the front door. This brings us back to Pope Francis, a humble man who accepts that he\u2019s very powerful . He may have a little car and a modest home, but when he looks out at the world, his gaze isn\u2019t defensive. He wants Catholicism to thrive \u2014 on a planet without global warming. He knows there are places where Catholics are suffering terribly for their faith, but when he looks at an embattled flock, he also sees Muslim immigrants who need Christian countries to open their borders.", "paragraph_answer": "I spent a lot of time trying to figure out how Tarcisius might have gotten away unscathed. Maybe by pretending to have a sore throat? It seemed important to identify the best strategy, because some modern-day version of the Huns or pagan Romans could arrive at any minute. Catholicism was, as I learned after the Pius XII incident, the largest faith in my city. Many of our teachers were probably only a generation away from being picked-on immigrants, and maybe they brought their sense of paranoia with them to the classrooms. That\u2019s understandable, but being both the powerful majority and the persecuted minority is like having your cake and eating it, and then taking over the bakery and bolting the front door. This brings us back to Pope Francis, a humble man who accepts that he\u2019s very powerful . He may have a little car and a modest home, but when he looks out at the world, his gaze isn\u2019t defensive. He wants Catholicism to thrive \u2014 on a planet without global warming. He knows there are places where Catholics are suffering terribly for their faith, but when he looks at an embattled flock, he also sees Muslim immigrants who need Christian countries to open their borders.", "sentence_answer": "This brings us back to Pope Francis, a humble man who accepts that he\u2019s very powerful ."} +{"question": "What does the Pope deem necessary for Muslim immigrants?", "paragraph": "I spent a lot of time trying to figure out how Tarcisius might have gotten away unscathed. Maybe by pretending to have a sore throat? It seemed important to identify the best strategy, because some modern-day version of the Huns or pagan Romans could arrive at any minute. Catholicism was, as I learned after the Pius XII incident, the largest faith in my city. Many of our teachers were probably only a generation away from being picked-on immigrants, and maybe they brought their sense of paranoia with them to the classrooms. That\u2019s understandable, but being both the powerful majority and the persecuted minority is like having your cake and eating it, and then taking over the bakery and bolting the front door. This brings us back to Pope Francis, a humble man who accepts that he\u2019s very powerful. He may have a little car and a modest home, but when he looks out at the world, his gaze isn\u2019t defensive. He wants Catholicism to thrive \u2014 on a planet without global warming. He knows there are places where Catholics are suffering terribly for their faith, but when he looks at an embattled flock, he also sees Muslim immigrants who need Christian countries to open their borders.", "answer": "Christian countries to open their borders", "sentence": "He knows there are places where Catholics are suffering terribly for their faith, but when he looks at an embattled flock, he also sees Muslim immigrants who need Christian countries to open their borders .", "paragraph_sentence": "I spent a lot of time trying to figure out how Tarcisius might have gotten away unscathed. Maybe by pretending to have a sore throat? It seemed important to identify the best strategy, because some modern-day version of the Huns or pagan Romans could arrive at any minute. Catholicism was, as I learned after the Pius XII incident, the largest faith in my city. Many of our teachers were probably only a generation away from being picked-on immigrants, and maybe they brought their sense of paranoia with them to the classrooms. That\u2019s understandable, but being both the powerful majority and the persecuted minority is like having your cake and eating it, and then taking over the bakery and bolting the front door. This brings us back to Pope Francis, a humble man who accepts that he\u2019s very powerful. He may have a little car and a modest home, but when he looks out at the world, his gaze isn\u2019t defensive. He wants Catholicism to thrive \u2014 on a planet without global warming. He knows there are places where Catholics are suffering terribly for their faith, but when he looks at an embattled flock, he also sees Muslim immigrants who need Christian countries to open their borders . ", "paragraph_answer": "I spent a lot of time trying to figure out how Tarcisius might have gotten away unscathed. Maybe by pretending to have a sore throat? It seemed important to identify the best strategy, because some modern-day version of the Huns or pagan Romans could arrive at any minute. Catholicism was, as I learned after the Pius XII incident, the largest faith in my city. Many of our teachers were probably only a generation away from being picked-on immigrants, and maybe they brought their sense of paranoia with them to the classrooms. That\u2019s understandable, but being both the powerful majority and the persecuted minority is like having your cake and eating it, and then taking over the bakery and bolting the front door. This brings us back to Pope Francis, a humble man who accepts that he\u2019s very powerful. He may have a little car and a modest home, but when he looks out at the world, his gaze isn\u2019t defensive. He wants Catholicism to thrive \u2014 on a planet without global warming. He knows there are places where Catholics are suffering terribly for their faith, but when he looks at an embattled flock, he also sees Muslim immigrants who need Christian countries to open their borders .", "sentence_answer": "He knows there are places where Catholics are suffering terribly for their faith, but when he looks at an embattled flock, he also sees Muslim immigrants who need Christian countries to open their borders ."} +{"question": "Many teachers likely came in with what trait to their classrooms, according to the author?", "paragraph": "I spent a lot of time trying to figure out how Tarcisius might have gotten away unscathed. Maybe by pretending to have a sore throat? It seemed important to identify the best strategy, because some modern-day version of the Huns or pagan Romans could arrive at any minute. Catholicism was, as I learned after the Pius XII incident, the largest faith in my city. Many of our teachers were probably only a generation away from being picked-on immigrants, and maybe they brought their sense of paranoia with them to the classrooms. That\u2019s understandable, but being both the powerful majority and the persecuted minority is like having your cake and eating it, and then taking over the bakery and bolting the front door. This brings us back to Pope Francis, a humble man who accepts that he\u2019s very powerful. He may have a little car and a modest home, but when he looks out at the world, his gaze isn\u2019t defensive. He wants Catholicism to thrive \u2014 on a planet without global warming. He knows there are places where Catholics are suffering terribly for their faith, but when he looks at an embattled flock, he also sees Muslim immigrants who need Christian countries to open their borders.", "answer": "their sense of paranoia", "sentence": "Many of our teachers were probably only a generation away from being picked-on immigrants, and maybe they brought their sense of paranoia with them to the classrooms.", "paragraph_sentence": "I spent a lot of time trying to figure out how Tarcisius might have gotten away unscathed. Maybe by pretending to have a sore throat? It seemed important to identify the best strategy, because some modern-day version of the Huns or pagan Romans could arrive at any minute. Catholicism was, as I learned after the Pius XII incident, the largest faith in my city. Many of our teachers were probably only a generation away from being picked-on immigrants, and maybe they brought their sense of paranoia with them to the classrooms. That\u2019s understandable, but being both the powerful majority and the persecuted minority is like having your cake and eating it, and then taking over the bakery and bolting the front door. This brings us back to Pope Francis, a humble man who accepts that he\u2019s very powerful. He may have a little car and a modest home, but when he looks out at the world, his gaze isn\u2019t defensive. He wants Catholicism to thrive \u2014 on a planet without global warming. He knows there are places where Catholics are suffering terribly for their faith, but when he looks at an embattled flock, he also sees Muslim immigrants who need Christian countries to open their borders.", "paragraph_answer": "I spent a lot of time trying to figure out how Tarcisius might have gotten away unscathed. Maybe by pretending to have a sore throat? It seemed important to identify the best strategy, because some modern-day version of the Huns or pagan Romans could arrive at any minute. Catholicism was, as I learned after the Pius XII incident, the largest faith in my city. Many of our teachers were probably only a generation away from being picked-on immigrants, and maybe they brought their sense of paranoia with them to the classrooms. That\u2019s understandable, but being both the powerful majority and the persecuted minority is like having your cake and eating it, and then taking over the bakery and bolting the front door. This brings us back to Pope Francis, a humble man who accepts that he\u2019s very powerful. He may have a little car and a modest home, but when he looks out at the world, his gaze isn\u2019t defensive. He wants Catholicism to thrive \u2014 on a planet without global warming. He knows there are places where Catholics are suffering terribly for their faith, but when he looks at an embattled flock, he also sees Muslim immigrants who need Christian countries to open their borders.", "sentence_answer": "Many of our teachers were probably only a generation away from being picked-on immigrants, and maybe they brought their sense of paranoia with them to the classrooms."} +{"question": "Which religion had the highest number of members in the author's city?", "paragraph": "I spent a lot of time trying to figure out how Tarcisius might have gotten away unscathed. Maybe by pretending to have a sore throat? It seemed important to identify the best strategy, because some modern-day version of the Huns or pagan Romans could arrive at any minute. Catholicism was, as I learned after the Pius XII incident, the largest faith in my city. Many of our teachers were probably only a generation away from being picked-on immigrants, and maybe they brought their sense of paranoia with them to the classrooms. That\u2019s understandable, but being both the powerful majority and the persecuted minority is like having your cake and eating it, and then taking over the bakery and bolting the front door. This brings us back to Pope Francis, a humble man who accepts that he\u2019s very powerful. He may have a little car and a modest home, but when he looks out at the world, his gaze isn\u2019t defensive. He wants Catholicism to thrive \u2014 on a planet without global warming. He knows there are places where Catholics are suffering terribly for their faith, but when he looks at an embattled flock, he also sees Muslim immigrants who need Christian countries to open their borders.", "answer": "Catholicism", "sentence": "Catholicism was, as I learned after the Pius XII incident, the largest faith in my city.", "paragraph_sentence": "I spent a lot of time trying to figure out how Tarcisius might have gotten away unscathed. Maybe by pretending to have a sore throat? It seemed important to identify the best strategy, because some modern-day version of the Huns or pagan Romans could arrive at any minute. Catholicism was, as I learned after the Pius XII incident, the largest faith in my city. Many of our teachers were probably only a generation away from being picked-on immigrants, and maybe they brought their sense of paranoia with them to the classrooms. That\u2019s understandable, but being both the powerful majority and the persecuted minority is like having your cake and eating it, and then taking over the bakery and bolting the front door. This brings us back to Pope Francis, a humble man who accepts that he\u2019s very powerful. He may have a little car and a modest home, but when he looks out at the world, his gaze isn\u2019t defensive. He wants Catholicism to thrive \u2014 on a planet without global warming. He knows there are places where Catholics are suffering terribly for their faith, but when he looks at an embattled flock, he also sees Muslim immigrants who need Christian countries to open their borders.", "paragraph_answer": "I spent a lot of time trying to figure out how Tarcisius might have gotten away unscathed. Maybe by pretending to have a sore throat? It seemed important to identify the best strategy, because some modern-day version of the Huns or pagan Romans could arrive at any minute. Catholicism was, as I learned after the Pius XII incident, the largest faith in my city. Many of our teachers were probably only a generation away from being picked-on immigrants, and maybe they brought their sense of paranoia with them to the classrooms. That\u2019s understandable, but being both the powerful majority and the persecuted minority is like having your cake and eating it, and then taking over the bakery and bolting the front door. This brings us back to Pope Francis, a humble man who accepts that he\u2019s very powerful. He may have a little car and a modest home, but when he looks out at the world, his gaze isn\u2019t defensive. He wants Catholicism to thrive \u2014 on a planet without global warming. He knows there are places where Catholics are suffering terribly for their faith, but when he looks at an embattled flock, he also sees Muslim immigrants who need Christian countries to open their borders.", "sentence_answer": " Catholicism was, as I learned after the Pius XII incident, the largest faith in my city."} +{"question": "Why was the author preoccupied with learning the ideal strategy?", "paragraph": "I spent a lot of time trying to figure out how Tarcisius might have gotten away unscathed. Maybe by pretending to have a sore throat? It seemed important to identify the best strategy, because some modern-day version of the Huns or pagan Romans could arrive at any minute. Catholicism was, as I learned after the Pius XII incident, the largest faith in my city. Many of our teachers were probably only a generation away from being picked-on immigrants, and maybe they brought their sense of paranoia with them to the classrooms. That\u2019s understandable, but being both the powerful majority and the persecuted minority is like having your cake and eating it, and then taking over the bakery and bolting the front door. This brings us back to Pope Francis, a humble man who accepts that he\u2019s very powerful. He may have a little car and a modest home, but when he looks out at the world, his gaze isn\u2019t defensive. He wants Catholicism to thrive \u2014 on a planet without global warming. He knows there are places where Catholics are suffering terribly for their faith, but when he looks at an embattled flock, he also sees Muslim immigrants who need Christian countries to open their borders.", "answer": "because some modern-day version of the Huns or pagan Romans could arrive at any minute", "sentence": "It seemed important to identify the best strategy, because some modern-day version of the Huns or pagan Romans could arrive at any minute .", "paragraph_sentence": "I spent a lot of time trying to figure out how Tarcisius might have gotten away unscathed. Maybe by pretending to have a sore throat? It seemed important to identify the best strategy, because some modern-day version of the Huns or pagan Romans could arrive at any minute . Catholicism was, as I learned after the Pius XII incident, the largest faith in my city. Many of our teachers were probably only a generation away from being picked-on immigrants, and maybe they brought their sense of paranoia with them to the classrooms. That\u2019s understandable, but being both the powerful majority and the persecuted minority is like having your cake and eating it, and then taking over the bakery and bolting the front door. This brings us back to Pope Francis, a humble man who accepts that he\u2019s very powerful. He may have a little car and a modest home, but when he looks out at the world, his gaze isn\u2019t defensive. He wants Catholicism to thrive \u2014 on a planet without global warming. He knows there are places where Catholics are suffering terribly for their faith, but when he looks at an embattled flock, he also sees Muslim immigrants who need Christian countries to open their borders.", "paragraph_answer": "I spent a lot of time trying to figure out how Tarcisius might have gotten away unscathed. Maybe by pretending to have a sore throat? It seemed important to identify the best strategy, because some modern-day version of the Huns or pagan Romans could arrive at any minute . Catholicism was, as I learned after the Pius XII incident, the largest faith in my city. Many of our teachers were probably only a generation away from being picked-on immigrants, and maybe they brought their sense of paranoia with them to the classrooms. That\u2019s understandable, but being both the powerful majority and the persecuted minority is like having your cake and eating it, and then taking over the bakery and bolting the front door. This brings us back to Pope Francis, a humble man who accepts that he\u2019s very powerful. He may have a little car and a modest home, but when he looks out at the world, his gaze isn\u2019t defensive. He wants Catholicism to thrive \u2014 on a planet without global warming. He knows there are places where Catholics are suffering terribly for their faith, but when he looks at an embattled flock, he also sees Muslim immigrants who need Christian countries to open their borders.", "sentence_answer": "It seemed important to identify the best strategy, because some modern-day version of the Huns or pagan Romans could arrive at any minute ."} +{"question": "The author was content with their spiritual well being as long as they abstained from what?", "paragraph": "\u201cLike \u2026\u201d I groped. \u201c\u2026Greed?\u201d All I knew about greed was cartoons of Scrooge McDuck sitting on a pile of money. There were obviously a lot of character failings we could have discussed. My friends and I were capable of floating for weeks without seriously directing attention at anything that didn\u2019t involve ourselves. But as long as we kept away from boys\u2019 wandering hands, we felt spiritually A-O.K. This pope is highly unlikely to accept gay marriage, and he\u2019ll never give abortion a pass. But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted: hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation. It\u2019s a long, long way from believing that God looked at Clark Gable\u2019s soul and saw nothing but a guy who got divorced.", "answer": "boys\u2019 wandering hands", "sentence": "But as long as we kept away from boys\u2019 wandering hands , we felt spiritually A-O.K.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cLike \u2026\u201d I groped. \u201c\u2026Greed?\u201d All I knew about greed was cartoons of Scrooge McDuck sitting on a pile of money. There were obviously a lot of character failings we could have discussed. My friends and I were capable of floating for weeks without seriously directing attention at anything that didn\u2019t involve ourselves. But as long as we kept away from boys\u2019 wandering hands , we felt spiritually A-O.K. This pope is highly unlikely to accept gay marriage, and he\u2019ll never give abortion a pass. But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted: hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation. It\u2019s a long, long way from believing that God looked at Clark Gable\u2019s soul and saw nothing but a guy who got divorced.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cLike \u2026\u201d I groped. \u201c\u2026Greed?\u201d All I knew about greed was cartoons of Scrooge McDuck sitting on a pile of money. There were obviously a lot of character failings we could have discussed. My friends and I were capable of floating for weeks without seriously directing attention at anything that didn\u2019t involve ourselves. But as long as we kept away from boys\u2019 wandering hands , we felt spiritually A-O.K. This pope is highly unlikely to accept gay marriage, and he\u2019ll never give abortion a pass. But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted: hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation. It\u2019s a long, long way from believing that God looked at Clark Gable\u2019s soul and saw nothing but a guy who got divorced.", "sentence_answer": "But as long as we kept away from boys\u2019 wandering hands , we felt spiritually A-O.K."} +{"question": "Besides abortion, what other issue is the pope almost certain to reject?", "paragraph": "\u201cLike \u2026\u201d I groped. \u201c\u2026Greed?\u201d All I knew about greed was cartoons of Scrooge McDuck sitting on a pile of money. There were obviously a lot of character failings we could have discussed. My friends and I were capable of floating for weeks without seriously directing attention at anything that didn\u2019t involve ourselves. But as long as we kept away from boys\u2019 wandering hands, we felt spiritually A-O.K. This pope is highly unlikely to accept gay marriage, and he\u2019ll never give abortion a pass. But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted: hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation. It\u2019s a long, long way from believing that God looked at Clark Gable\u2019s soul and saw nothing but a guy who got divorced.", "answer": "gay marriage", "sentence": "This pope is highly unlikely to accept gay marriage , and he\u2019ll never give abortion a pass.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cLike \u2026\u201d I groped. \u201c\u2026Greed?\u201d All I knew about greed was cartoons of Scrooge McDuck sitting on a pile of money. There were obviously a lot of character failings we could have discussed. My friends and I were capable of floating for weeks without seriously directing attention at anything that didn\u2019t involve ourselves. But as long as we kept away from boys\u2019 wandering hands, we felt spiritually A-O.K. This pope is highly unlikely to accept gay marriage , and he\u2019ll never give abortion a pass. But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted: hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation. It\u2019s a long, long way from believing that God looked at Clark Gable\u2019s soul and saw nothing but a guy who got divorced.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cLike \u2026\u201d I groped. \u201c\u2026Greed?\u201d All I knew about greed was cartoons of Scrooge McDuck sitting on a pile of money. There were obviously a lot of character failings we could have discussed. My friends and I were capable of floating for weeks without seriously directing attention at anything that didn\u2019t involve ourselves. But as long as we kept away from boys\u2019 wandering hands, we felt spiritually A-O.K. This pope is highly unlikely to accept gay marriage , and he\u2019ll never give abortion a pass. But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted: hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation. It\u2019s a long, long way from believing that God looked at Clark Gable\u2019s soul and saw nothing but a guy who got divorced.", "sentence_answer": "This pope is highly unlikely to accept gay marriage , and he\u2019ll never give abortion a pass."} +{"question": "Which cartoon character sat on top of stacks of cash?", "paragraph": "\u201cLike \u2026\u201d I groped. \u201c\u2026Greed?\u201d All I knew about greed was cartoons of Scrooge McDuck sitting on a pile of money. There were obviously a lot of character failings we could have discussed. My friends and I were capable of floating for weeks without seriously directing attention at anything that didn\u2019t involve ourselves. But as long as we kept away from boys\u2019 wandering hands, we felt spiritually A-O.K. This pope is highly unlikely to accept gay marriage, and he\u2019ll never give abortion a pass. But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted: hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation. It\u2019s a long, long way from believing that God looked at Clark Gable\u2019s soul and saw nothing but a guy who got divorced.", "answer": "Scrooge McDuck", "sentence": "All I knew about greed was cartoons of Scrooge McDuck sitting on a pile of money.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cLike \u2026\u201d I groped. \u201c\u2026Greed?\u201d All I knew about greed was cartoons of Scrooge McDuck sitting on a pile of money. There were obviously a lot of character failings we could have discussed. My friends and I were capable of floating for weeks without seriously directing attention at anything that didn\u2019t involve ourselves. But as long as we kept away from boys\u2019 wandering hands, we felt spiritually A-O.K. This pope is highly unlikely to accept gay marriage, and he\u2019ll never give abortion a pass. But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted: hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation. It\u2019s a long, long way from believing that God looked at Clark Gable\u2019s soul and saw nothing but a guy who got divorced.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cLike \u2026\u201d I groped. \u201c\u2026Greed?\u201d All I knew about greed was cartoons of Scrooge McDuck sitting on a pile of money. There were obviously a lot of character failings we could have discussed. My friends and I were capable of floating for weeks without seriously directing attention at anything that didn\u2019t involve ourselves. But as long as we kept away from boys\u2019 wandering hands, we felt spiritually A-O.K. This pope is highly unlikely to accept gay marriage, and he\u2019ll never give abortion a pass. But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted: hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation. It\u2019s a long, long way from believing that God looked at Clark Gable\u2019s soul and saw nothing but a guy who got divorced.", "sentence_answer": "All I knew about greed was cartoons of Scrooge McDuck sitting on a pile of money."} +{"question": "What did the pope lump abortion along with, during his Washington visit?", "paragraph": "\u201cLike \u2026\u201d I groped. \u201c\u2026Greed?\u201d All I knew about greed was cartoons of Scrooge McDuck sitting on a pile of money. There were obviously a lot of character failings we could have discussed. My friends and I were capable of floating for weeks without seriously directing attention at anything that didn\u2019t involve ourselves. But as long as we kept away from boys\u2019 wandering hands, we felt spiritually A-O.K. This pope is highly unlikely to accept gay marriage, and he\u2019ll never give abortion a pass. But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted: hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation. It\u2019s a long, long way from believing that God looked at Clark Gable\u2019s soul and saw nothing but a guy who got divorced.", "answer": "a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted", "sentence": "But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted : hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cLike \u2026\u201d I groped. \u201c\u2026Greed?\u201d All I knew about greed was cartoons of Scrooge McDuck sitting on a pile of money. There were obviously a lot of character failings we could have discussed. My friends and I were capable of floating for weeks without seriously directing attention at anything that didn\u2019t involve ourselves. But as long as we kept away from boys\u2019 wandering hands, we felt spiritually A-O.K. This pope is highly unlikely to accept gay marriage, and he\u2019ll never give abortion a pass. But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted : hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation. It\u2019s a long, long way from believing that God looked at Clark Gable\u2019s soul and saw nothing but a guy who got divorced.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cLike \u2026\u201d I groped. \u201c\u2026Greed?\u201d All I knew about greed was cartoons of Scrooge McDuck sitting on a pile of money. There were obviously a lot of character failings we could have discussed. My friends and I were capable of floating for weeks without seriously directing attention at anything that didn\u2019t involve ourselves. But as long as we kept away from boys\u2019 wandering hands, we felt spiritually A-O.K. This pope is highly unlikely to accept gay marriage, and he\u2019ll never give abortion a pass. But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted : hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation. It\u2019s a long, long way from believing that God looked at Clark Gable\u2019s soul and saw nothing but a guy who got divorced.", "sentence_answer": "But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted : hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation."} +{"question": "Which people, according to the pope, are viewed as an unwanted obligation by others?", "paragraph": "\u201cLike \u2026\u201d I groped. \u201c\u2026Greed?\u201d All I knew about greed was cartoons of Scrooge McDuck sitting on a pile of money. There were obviously a lot of character failings we could have discussed. My friends and I were capable of floating for weeks without seriously directing attention at anything that didn\u2019t involve ourselves. But as long as we kept away from boys\u2019 wandering hands, we felt spiritually A-O.K. This pope is highly unlikely to accept gay marriage, and he\u2019ll never give abortion a pass. But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted: hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation. It\u2019s a long, long way from believing that God looked at Clark Gable\u2019s soul and saw nothing but a guy who got divorced.", "answer": "old or sick people", "sentence": "But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted: hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cLike \u2026\u201d I groped. \u201c\u2026Greed?\u201d All I knew about greed was cartoons of Scrooge McDuck sitting on a pile of money. There were obviously a lot of character failings we could have discussed. My friends and I were capable of floating for weeks without seriously directing attention at anything that didn\u2019t involve ourselves. But as long as we kept away from boys\u2019 wandering hands, we felt spiritually A-O.K. This pope is highly unlikely to accept gay marriage, and he\u2019ll never give abortion a pass. But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted: hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation. It\u2019s a long, long way from believing that God looked at Clark Gable\u2019s soul and saw nothing but a guy who got divorced.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cLike \u2026\u201d I groped. \u201c\u2026Greed?\u201d All I knew about greed was cartoons of Scrooge McDuck sitting on a pile of money. There were obviously a lot of character failings we could have discussed. My friends and I were capable of floating for weeks without seriously directing attention at anything that didn\u2019t involve ourselves. But as long as we kept away from boys\u2019 wandering hands, we felt spiritually A-O.K. This pope is highly unlikely to accept gay marriage, and he\u2019ll never give abortion a pass. But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted: hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation. It\u2019s a long, long way from believing that God looked at Clark Gable\u2019s soul and saw nothing but a guy who got divorced.", "sentence_answer": "But in Washington he grouped abortion in a long catalog of wrongs that need to be righted: hungry children, bombing, \u201cimmigrants who drown in the search for a better tomorrow,\u201d old or sick people who are treated as a burden, terrorism, war, drug trafficking and environmental devastation."} +{"question": "Which team is at the top seed in the Eastern Conference?", "paragraph": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat. Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia, as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "answer": "Bulls", "sentence": "That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat. Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia, as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat. Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia, as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "sentence_answer": "That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23."} +{"question": "Which team did LeBron James represent?", "paragraph": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat. Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia, as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "answer": "Miami Heat", "sentence": "They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat . Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia, as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat . Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia, as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "sentence_answer": "They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat ."} +{"question": "Which team did Bulls play in their Game 1 of playoff?", "paragraph": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat. Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia, as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "answer": "Philadelphia", "sentence": "Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia , as Rose drove, his knee gave out.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat. Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia , as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat. Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia , as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "sentence_answer": "Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia , as Rose drove, his knee gave out."} +{"question": "Who got injured against Philadelphia?", "paragraph": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat. Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia, as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "answer": "Rose", "sentence": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat. Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia, as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat. Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia, as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said."} +{"question": "Which hospital team won between the Bulls and Miami Heat?", "paragraph": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat. Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia, as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "answer": "Miami Heat", "sentence": "They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat . Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia, as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI was just tired,\u201d Rose said. That scene was all too reminiscent of the night that everything changed for the Bulls and their star point guard, then 23. They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat . Late in Game 1 of their playoff opener against Philadelphia, as Rose drove, his knee gave out. The 76ers then dispatched the Bulls. What followed has been well chronicled, with Rose\u2019s career taking on the arc of a tragic novel. The A.C.L. injury cost him all of the next year; his teammates, many battling injuries themselves, fought valiantly in the playoffs, beating the Nets in seven games before succumbing to the Heat.", "sentence_answer": "They were the top seed in the Eastern Conference, seeking a playoff rematch against LeBron James and the Miami Heat ."} +{"question": "During what season did Rose got another injury?", "paragraph": "Rose, cleared medically but uncertain of his own health, was accused of a lack of toughness and a me-first attitude. When he finally returned for the next season, 2013-14, another injury \u2014 this time a torn medial meniscus in his right knee \u2014 felled him in only his 10th game. Rose aggravated the injury this season, had surgery and missed a quarter of the campaign; he returned just before the end of the regular season. In his absence, the Bulls were a scrappy underdog \u2014 a solid regular-season team that lacked the star power for playoff crunchtime. On Saturday, they had the look of a championship contender.", "answer": "2013-14", "sentence": "When he finally returned for the next season, 2013-14 , another injury \u2014 this time a torn medial meniscus in his right knee \u2014 felled him in only his 10th game.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rose, cleared medically but uncertain of his own health, was accused of a lack of toughness and a me-first attitude. When he finally returned for the next season, 2013-14 , another injury \u2014 this time a torn medial meniscus in his right knee \u2014 felled him in only his 10th game. Rose aggravated the injury this season, had surgery and missed a quarter of the campaign; he returned just before the end of the regular season. In his absence, the Bulls were a scrappy underdog \u2014 a solid regular-season team that lacked the star power for playoff crunchtime. On Saturday, they had the look of a championship contender.", "paragraph_answer": "Rose, cleared medically but uncertain of his own health, was accused of a lack of toughness and a me-first attitude. When he finally returned for the next season, 2013-14 , another injury \u2014 this time a torn medial meniscus in his right knee \u2014 felled him in only his 10th game. Rose aggravated the injury this season, had surgery and missed a quarter of the campaign; he returned just before the end of the regular season. In his absence, the Bulls were a scrappy underdog \u2014 a solid regular-season team that lacked the star power for playoff crunchtime. On Saturday, they had the look of a championship contender.", "sentence_answer": "When he finally returned for the next season, 2013-14 , another injury \u2014 this time a torn medial meniscus in his right knee \u2014 felled him in only his 10th game."} +{"question": "In which of of the knee did Rose injured?", "paragraph": "Rose, cleared medically but uncertain of his own health, was accused of a lack of toughness and a me-first attitude. When he finally returned for the next season, 2013-14, another injury \u2014 this time a torn medial meniscus in his right knee \u2014 felled him in only his 10th game. Rose aggravated the injury this season, had surgery and missed a quarter of the campaign; he returned just before the end of the regular season. In his absence, the Bulls were a scrappy underdog \u2014 a solid regular-season team that lacked the star power for playoff crunchtime. On Saturday, they had the look of a championship contender.", "answer": "right", "sentence": "When he finally returned for the next season, 2013-14, another injury \u2014 this time a torn medial meniscus in his right knee \u2014 felled him in only his 10th game.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rose, cleared medically but uncertain of his own health, was accused of a lack of toughness and a me-first attitude. When he finally returned for the next season, 2013-14, another injury \u2014 this time a torn medial meniscus in his right knee \u2014 felled him in only his 10th game. Rose aggravated the injury this season, had surgery and missed a quarter of the campaign; he returned just before the end of the regular season. In his absence, the Bulls were a scrappy underdog \u2014 a solid regular-season team that lacked the star power for playoff crunchtime. On Saturday, they had the look of a championship contender.", "paragraph_answer": "Rose, cleared medically but uncertain of his own health, was accused of a lack of toughness and a me-first attitude. When he finally returned for the next season, 2013-14, another injury \u2014 this time a torn medial meniscus in his right knee \u2014 felled him in only his 10th game. Rose aggravated the injury this season, had surgery and missed a quarter of the campaign; he returned just before the end of the regular season. In his absence, the Bulls were a scrappy underdog \u2014 a solid regular-season team that lacked the star power for playoff crunchtime. On Saturday, they had the look of a championship contender.", "sentence_answer": "When he finally returned for the next season, 2013-14, another injury \u2014 this time a torn medial meniscus in his right knee \u2014 felled him in only his 10th game."} +{"question": "Which is team is scrappy underdog?", "paragraph": "Rose, cleared medically but uncertain of his own health, was accused of a lack of toughness and a me-first attitude. When he finally returned for the next season, 2013-14, another injury \u2014 this time a torn medial meniscus in his right knee \u2014 felled him in only his 10th game. Rose aggravated the injury this season, had surgery and missed a quarter of the campaign; he returned just before the end of the regular season. In his absence, the Bulls were a scrappy underdog \u2014 a solid regular-season team that lacked the star power for playoff crunchtime. On Saturday, they had the look of a championship contender.", "answer": "Bulls", "sentence": "In his absence, the Bulls were a scrappy underdog \u2014 a solid regular-season team that lacked the star power for playoff crunchtime.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rose, cleared medically but uncertain of his own health, was accused of a lack of toughness and a me-first attitude. When he finally returned for the next season, 2013-14, another injury \u2014 this time a torn medial meniscus in his right knee \u2014 felled him in only his 10th game. Rose aggravated the injury this season, had surgery and missed a quarter of the campaign; he returned just before the end of the regular season. In his absence, the Bulls were a scrappy underdog \u2014 a solid regular-season team that lacked the star power for playoff crunchtime. On Saturday, they had the look of a championship contender.", "paragraph_answer": "Rose, cleared medically but uncertain of his own health, was accused of a lack of toughness and a me-first attitude. When he finally returned for the next season, 2013-14, another injury \u2014 this time a torn medial meniscus in his right knee \u2014 felled him in only his 10th game. Rose aggravated the injury this season, had surgery and missed a quarter of the campaign; he returned just before the end of the regular season. In his absence, the Bulls were a scrappy underdog \u2014 a solid regular-season team that lacked the star power for playoff crunchtime. On Saturday, they had the look of a championship contender.", "sentence_answer": "In his absence, the Bulls were a scrappy underdog \u2014 a solid regular-season team that lacked the star power for playoff crunchtime."} +{"question": "How many part of the campaign did Rose miss?", "paragraph": "Rose, cleared medically but uncertain of his own health, was accused of a lack of toughness and a me-first attitude. When he finally returned for the next season, 2013-14, another injury \u2014 this time a torn medial meniscus in his right knee \u2014 felled him in only his 10th game. Rose aggravated the injury this season, had surgery and missed a quarter of the campaign; he returned just before the end of the regular season. In his absence, the Bulls were a scrappy underdog \u2014 a solid regular-season team that lacked the star power for playoff crunchtime. On Saturday, they had the look of a championship contender.", "answer": "quarter", "sentence": "Rose aggravated the injury this season, had surgery and missed a quarter of the campaign; he returned just before the end of the regular season.", "paragraph_sentence": "Rose, cleared medically but uncertain of his own health, was accused of a lack of toughness and a me-first attitude. When he finally returned for the next season, 2013-14, another injury \u2014 this time a torn medial meniscus in his right knee \u2014 felled him in only his 10th game. Rose aggravated the injury this season, had surgery and missed a quarter of the campaign; he returned just before the end of the regular season. In his absence, the Bulls were a scrappy underdog \u2014 a solid regular-season team that lacked the star power for playoff crunchtime. On Saturday, they had the look of a championship contender.", "paragraph_answer": "Rose, cleared medically but uncertain of his own health, was accused of a lack of toughness and a me-first attitude. When he finally returned for the next season, 2013-14, another injury \u2014 this time a torn medial meniscus in his right knee \u2014 felled him in only his 10th game. Rose aggravated the injury this season, had surgery and missed a quarter of the campaign; he returned just before the end of the regular season. In his absence, the Bulls were a scrappy underdog \u2014 a solid regular-season team that lacked the star power for playoff crunchtime. On Saturday, they had the look of a championship contender.", "sentence_answer": "Rose aggravated the injury this season, had surgery and missed a quarter of the campaign; he returned just before the end of the regular season."} +{"question": "Which player signed for Los Angeles Lakers during the off-season?", "paragraph": "This year\u2019s Bulls team is also a new vintage, offering Rose more supporting offensive firepower. Pau Gasol, a seasoned veteran and an N.B.A. champion with the Los Angeles Lakers who was signed during the off-season, was an All-Star starter this season. Nikola Mirotic is a sharpshooter and a rookie of the year contender. Jimmy Butler, who led the Bulls with 25 points Saturday, has emerged as a star. \u201cI\u2019m grateful to be playing with my teammates,\u201d Rose said. \u201cThey allow me to play the way I normally play. It\u2019s an honor. I\u2019m really fortunate because I think, anywhere else, it wouldn\u2019t be the same.\u201d", "answer": "Pau Gasol", "sentence": "Pau Gasol , a seasoned veteran and an N.B.A. champion with the Los Angeles Lakers who was signed during the off-season, was an All-Star starter this season.", "paragraph_sentence": "This year\u2019s Bulls team is also a new vintage, offering Rose more supporting offensive firepower. Pau Gasol , a seasoned veteran and an N.B.A. champion with the Los Angeles Lakers who was signed during the off-season, was an All-Star starter this season. Nikola Mirotic is a sharpshooter and a rookie of the year contender. Jimmy Butler, who led the Bulls with 25 points Saturday, has emerged as a star. \u201cI\u2019m grateful to be playing with my teammates,\u201d Rose said. \u201cThey allow me to play the way I normally play. It\u2019s an honor. I\u2019m really fortunate because I think, anywhere else, it wouldn\u2019t be the same.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "This year\u2019s Bulls team is also a new vintage, offering Rose more supporting offensive firepower. Pau Gasol , a seasoned veteran and an N.B.A. champion with the Los Angeles Lakers who was signed during the off-season, was an All-Star starter this season. Nikola Mirotic is a sharpshooter and a rookie of the year contender. Jimmy Butler, who led the Bulls with 25 points Saturday, has emerged as a star. \u201cI\u2019m grateful to be playing with my teammates,\u201d Rose said. \u201cThey allow me to play the way I normally play. It\u2019s an honor. I\u2019m really fortunate because I think, anywhere else, it wouldn\u2019t be the same.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Pau Gasol , a seasoned veteran and an N.B.A. champion with the Los Angeles Lakers who was signed during the off-season, was an All-Star starter this season."} +{"question": "Who is the rookie of the year contender?", "paragraph": "This year\u2019s Bulls team is also a new vintage, offering Rose more supporting offensive firepower. Pau Gasol, a seasoned veteran and an N.B.A. champion with the Los Angeles Lakers who was signed during the off-season, was an All-Star starter this season. Nikola Mirotic is a sharpshooter and a rookie of the year contender. Jimmy Butler, who led the Bulls with 25 points Saturday, has emerged as a star. \u201cI\u2019m grateful to be playing with my teammates,\u201d Rose said. \u201cThey allow me to play the way I normally play. It\u2019s an honor. I\u2019m really fortunate because I think, anywhere else, it wouldn\u2019t be the same.\u201d", "answer": "Nikola Mirotic", "sentence": "Nikola Mirotic is a sharpshooter and a rookie of the year contender.", "paragraph_sentence": "This year\u2019s Bulls team is also a new vintage, offering Rose more supporting offensive firepower. Pau Gasol, a seasoned veteran and an N.B.A. champion with the Los Angeles Lakers who was signed during the off-season, was an All-Star starter this season. Nikola Mirotic is a sharpshooter and a rookie of the year contender. Jimmy Butler, who led the Bulls with 25 points Saturday, has emerged as a star. \u201cI\u2019m grateful to be playing with my teammates,\u201d Rose said. \u201cThey allow me to play the way I normally play. It\u2019s an honor. I\u2019m really fortunate because I think, anywhere else, it wouldn\u2019t be the same.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "This year\u2019s Bulls team is also a new vintage, offering Rose more supporting offensive firepower. Pau Gasol, a seasoned veteran and an N.B.A. champion with the Los Angeles Lakers who was signed during the off-season, was an All-Star starter this season. Nikola Mirotic is a sharpshooter and a rookie of the year contender. Jimmy Butler, who led the Bulls with 25 points Saturday, has emerged as a star. \u201cI\u2019m grateful to be playing with my teammates,\u201d Rose said. \u201cThey allow me to play the way I normally play. It\u2019s an honor. I\u2019m really fortunate because I think, anywhere else, it wouldn\u2019t be the same.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Nikola Mirotic is a sharpshooter and a rookie of the year contender."} +{"question": "Who led the Bulls with 25 points on Saturday?", "paragraph": "This year\u2019s Bulls team is also a new vintage, offering Rose more supporting offensive firepower. Pau Gasol, a seasoned veteran and an N.B.A. champion with the Los Angeles Lakers who was signed during the off-season, was an All-Star starter this season. Nikola Mirotic is a sharpshooter and a rookie of the year contender. Jimmy Butler, who led the Bulls with 25 points Saturday, has emerged as a star. \u201cI\u2019m grateful to be playing with my teammates,\u201d Rose said. \u201cThey allow me to play the way I normally play. It\u2019s an honor. I\u2019m really fortunate because I think, anywhere else, it wouldn\u2019t be the same.\u201d", "answer": "Jimmy Butler", "sentence": "Jimmy Butler , who led the Bulls with 25 points Saturday, has emerged as a star.", "paragraph_sentence": "This year\u2019s Bulls team is also a new vintage, offering Rose more supporting offensive firepower. Pau Gasol, a seasoned veteran and an N.B.A. champion with the Los Angeles Lakers who was signed during the off-season, was an All-Star starter this season. Nikola Mirotic is a sharpshooter and a rookie of the year contender. Jimmy Butler , who led the Bulls with 25 points Saturday, has emerged as a star. \u201cI\u2019m grateful to be playing with my teammates,\u201d Rose said. \u201cThey allow me to play the way I normally play. It\u2019s an honor. I\u2019m really fortunate because I think, anywhere else, it wouldn\u2019t be the same.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "This year\u2019s Bulls team is also a new vintage, offering Rose more supporting offensive firepower. Pau Gasol, a seasoned veteran and an N.B.A. champion with the Los Angeles Lakers who was signed during the off-season, was an All-Star starter this season. Nikola Mirotic is a sharpshooter and a rookie of the year contender. Jimmy Butler , who led the Bulls with 25 points Saturday, has emerged as a star. \u201cI\u2019m grateful to be playing with my teammates,\u201d Rose said. \u201cThey allow me to play the way I normally play. It\u2019s an honor. I\u2019m really fortunate because I think, anywhere else, it wouldn\u2019t be the same.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Jimmy Butler , who led the Bulls with 25 points Saturday, has emerged as a star."} +{"question": "Who was grateful to his teammates?", "paragraph": "This year\u2019s Bulls team is also a new vintage, offering Rose more supporting offensive firepower. Pau Gasol, a seasoned veteran and an N.B.A. champion with the Los Angeles Lakers who was signed during the off-season, was an All-Star starter this season. Nikola Mirotic is a sharpshooter and a rookie of the year contender. Jimmy Butler, who led the Bulls with 25 points Saturday, has emerged as a star. \u201cI\u2019m grateful to be playing with my teammates,\u201d Rose said. \u201cThey allow me to play the way I normally play. It\u2019s an honor. I\u2019m really fortunate because I think, anywhere else, it wouldn\u2019t be the same.\u201d", "answer": "Rose", "sentence": "This year\u2019s Bulls team is also a new vintage, offering Rose more supporting offensive firepower.", "paragraph_sentence": " This year\u2019s Bulls team is also a new vintage, offering Rose more supporting offensive firepower. Pau Gasol, a seasoned veteran and an N.B.A. champion with the Los Angeles Lakers who was signed during the off-season, was an All-Star starter this season. Nikola Mirotic is a sharpshooter and a rookie of the year contender. Jimmy Butler, who led the Bulls with 25 points Saturday, has emerged as a star. \u201cI\u2019m grateful to be playing with my teammates,\u201d Rose said. \u201cThey allow me to play the way I normally play. It\u2019s an honor. I\u2019m really fortunate because I think, anywhere else, it wouldn\u2019t be the same.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "This year\u2019s Bulls team is also a new vintage, offering Rose more supporting offensive firepower. Pau Gasol, a seasoned veteran and an N.B.A. champion with the Los Angeles Lakers who was signed during the off-season, was an All-Star starter this season. Nikola Mirotic is a sharpshooter and a rookie of the year contender. Jimmy Butler, who led the Bulls with 25 points Saturday, has emerged as a star. \u201cI\u2019m grateful to be playing with my teammates,\u201d Rose said. \u201cThey allow me to play the way I normally play. It\u2019s an honor. I\u2019m really fortunate because I think, anywhere else, it wouldn\u2019t be the same.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "This year\u2019s Bulls team is also a new vintage, offering Rose more supporting offensive firepower."} +{"question": "Which felony charge were the sky divers acquitted of?", "paragraph": "Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan. A jury in State Supreme Court found the sky divers \u2014 James Brady, Marko Markovich and Andrew Rossig \u2014 not guilty of burglary, rejecting the prosecution\u2019s argument that the three had entered the tower intending to commit a crime inside it. The jurors decided, however, that the defendants were each guilty of two counts of reckless endangerment and of breaking a New York City ordinance against parachuting off buildings and bridges. They face up to a year in jail on the top misdemeanor conviction.", "answer": "the most serious felony charge", "sentence": "Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan.", "paragraph_sentence": " Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan. A jury in State Supreme Court found the sky divers \u2014 James Brady, Marko Markovich and Andrew Rossig \u2014 not guilty of burglary, rejecting the prosecution\u2019s argument that the three had entered the tower intending to commit a crime inside it. The jurors decided, however, that the defendants were each guilty of two counts of reckless endangerment and of breaking a New York City ordinance against parachuting off buildings and bridges. They face up to a year in jail on the top misdemeanor conviction.", "paragraph_answer": "Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan. A jury in State Supreme Court found the sky divers \u2014 James Brady, Marko Markovich and Andrew Rossig \u2014 not guilty of burglary, rejecting the prosecution\u2019s argument that the three had entered the tower intending to commit a crime inside it. The jurors decided, however, that the defendants were each guilty of two counts of reckless endangerment and of breaking a New York City ordinance against parachuting off buildings and bridges. They face up to a year in jail on the top misdemeanor conviction.", "sentence_answer": "Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan."} +{"question": "Where was the trial located ?", "paragraph": "Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan. A jury in State Supreme Court found the sky divers \u2014 James Brady, Marko Markovich and Andrew Rossig \u2014 not guilty of burglary, rejecting the prosecution\u2019s argument that the three had entered the tower intending to commit a crime inside it. The jurors decided, however, that the defendants were each guilty of two counts of reckless endangerment and of breaking a New York City ordinance against parachuting off buildings and bridges. They face up to a year in jail on the top misdemeanor conviction.", "answer": "Manhattan", "sentence": "Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan .", "paragraph_sentence": " Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan . A jury in State Supreme Court found the sky divers \u2014 James Brady, Marko Markovich and Andrew Rossig \u2014 not guilty of burglary, rejecting the prosecution\u2019s argument that the three had entered the tower intending to commit a crime inside it. The jurors decided, however, that the defendants were each guilty of two counts of reckless endangerment and of breaking a New York City ordinance against parachuting off buildings and bridges. They face up to a year in jail on the top misdemeanor conviction.", "paragraph_answer": "Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan . A jury in State Supreme Court found the sky divers \u2014 James Brady, Marko Markovich and Andrew Rossig \u2014 not guilty of burglary, rejecting the prosecution\u2019s argument that the three had entered the tower intending to commit a crime inside it. The jurors decided, however, that the defendants were each guilty of two counts of reckless endangerment and of breaking a New York City ordinance against parachuting off buildings and bridges. They face up to a year in jail on the top misdemeanor conviction.", "sentence_answer": "Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan ."} +{"question": "How many misdemeanors were the sky divers convicted of?", "paragraph": "Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan. A jury in State Supreme Court found the sky divers \u2014 James Brady, Marko Markovich and Andrew Rossig \u2014 not guilty of burglary, rejecting the prosecution\u2019s argument that the three had entered the tower intending to commit a crime inside it. The jurors decided, however, that the defendants were each guilty of two counts of reckless endangerment and of breaking a New York City ordinance against parachuting off buildings and bridges. They face up to a year in jail on the top misdemeanor conviction.", "answer": "three misdemeanors", "sentence": "Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan.", "paragraph_sentence": " Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan. A jury in State Supreme Court found the sky divers \u2014 James Brady, Marko Markovich and Andrew Rossig \u2014 not guilty of burglary, rejecting the prosecution\u2019s argument that the three had entered the tower intending to commit a crime inside it. The jurors decided, however, that the defendants were each guilty of two counts of reckless endangerment and of breaking a New York City ordinance against parachuting off buildings and bridges. They face up to a year in jail on the top misdemeanor conviction.", "paragraph_answer": "Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan. A jury in State Supreme Court found the sky divers \u2014 James Brady, Marko Markovich and Andrew Rossig \u2014 not guilty of burglary, rejecting the prosecution\u2019s argument that the three had entered the tower intending to commit a crime inside it. The jurors decided, however, that the defendants were each guilty of two counts of reckless endangerment and of breaking a New York City ordinance against parachuting off buildings and bridges. They face up to a year in jail on the top misdemeanor conviction.", "sentence_answer": "Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan."} +{"question": "How long was the trial?", "paragraph": "Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan. A jury in State Supreme Court found the sky divers \u2014 James Brady, Marko Markovich and Andrew Rossig \u2014 not guilty of burglary, rejecting the prosecution\u2019s argument that the three had entered the tower intending to commit a crime inside it. The jurors decided, however, that the defendants were each guilty of two counts of reckless endangerment and of breaking a New York City ordinance against parachuting off buildings and bridges. They face up to a year in jail on the top misdemeanor conviction.", "answer": "a two-week trial", "sentence": "Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan.", "paragraph_sentence": " Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan. A jury in State Supreme Court found the sky divers \u2014 James Brady, Marko Markovich and Andrew Rossig \u2014 not guilty of burglary, rejecting the prosecution\u2019s argument that the three had entered the tower intending to commit a crime inside it. The jurors decided, however, that the defendants were each guilty of two counts of reckless endangerment and of breaking a New York City ordinance against parachuting off buildings and bridges. They face up to a year in jail on the top misdemeanor conviction.", "paragraph_answer": "Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan. A jury in State Supreme Court found the sky divers \u2014 James Brady, Marko Markovich and Andrew Rossig \u2014 not guilty of burglary, rejecting the prosecution\u2019s argument that the three had entered the tower intending to commit a crime inside it. The jurors decided, however, that the defendants were each guilty of two counts of reckless endangerment and of breaking a New York City ordinance against parachuting off buildings and bridges. They face up to a year in jail on the top misdemeanor conviction.", "sentence_answer": "Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan."} +{"question": "What were the skydivers convicted of?", "paragraph": "Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan. A jury in State Supreme Court found the sky divers \u2014 James Brady, Marko Markovich and Andrew Rossig \u2014 not guilty of burglary, rejecting the prosecution\u2019s argument that the three had entered the tower intending to commit a crime inside it. The jurors decided, however, that the defendants were each guilty of two counts of reckless endangerment and of breaking a New York City ordinance against parachuting off buildings and bridges. They face up to a year in jail on the top misdemeanor conviction.", "answer": "two counts of reckless endangerment and of breaking a New York City ordinance against parachuting off buildings and bridges", "sentence": "The jurors decided, however, that the defendants were each guilty of two counts of reckless endangerment and of breaking a New York City ordinance against parachuting off buildings and bridges .", "paragraph_sentence": "Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan. A jury in State Supreme Court found the sky divers \u2014 James Brady, Marko Markovich and Andrew Rossig \u2014 not guilty of burglary, rejecting the prosecution\u2019s argument that the three had entered the tower intending to commit a crime inside it. The jurors decided, however, that the defendants were each guilty of two counts of reckless endangerment and of breaking a New York City ordinance against parachuting off buildings and bridges . They face up to a year in jail on the top misdemeanor conviction.", "paragraph_answer": "Three sky divers who parachuted off the 1 World Trade Center tower were acquitted on Monday of the most serious felony charge against them but convicted of three misdemeanors after a two-week trial in Manhattan. A jury in State Supreme Court found the sky divers \u2014 James Brady, Marko Markovich and Andrew Rossig \u2014 not guilty of burglary, rejecting the prosecution\u2019s argument that the three had entered the tower intending to commit a crime inside it. The jurors decided, however, that the defendants were each guilty of two counts of reckless endangerment and of breaking a New York City ordinance against parachuting off buildings and bridges . They face up to a year in jail on the top misdemeanor conviction.", "sentence_answer": "The jurors decided, however, that the defendants were each guilty of two counts of reckless endangerment and of breaking a New York City ordinance against parachuting off buildings and bridges ."}